From Kirkus Reviews:
Well-known novelist and short-story writer Adams (also this year's Best American Short Stories editor--see above) reflects on a lifetime of vacationing in Mexico. What is it about Mexico, Adams wonders early on, that so intrigues North Americans? For some, the phrase ``south of the border'' connotes ``a cheery, cozy, somewhat infantile, villagey place''; for others--Malcolm Lowry for one--it ``is mad, surreal, and dangerous.'' The question is an interesting one but, alas, Adams--a master of subtlety--never really addresses it directly. Instead she attempts to reveal the country's paradoxical nature through adroitly delineated scenes of her own daily, and often mundane, encounters there: having a drink at an upscale hotel, visiting an out-of-the-way beach, putting up with an annoying accordionist during dinner. Adams is not as interested in description or narrative as she is in character and innuendo, and the book is filled with one short stylish scene after another. In Zihuatanejo, Adams and ``R.'' rendezvous annually with a rather mysterious older couple; in Campeche, she develops (apologetically) an antipathy for her maid (``her painted-on eyebrows, her small, hostile unintelligent eyes''). Sometimes this low-key, diarylike method works extremely well, and, as Jan Morris notes in her introduction, Adams's ``apparently ingenuous jottings turn out to be more calculated than they seem.'' All too often, however, we are left hungering for more. Adams's hints and suggestions, which in a novel could reveal character, seem insufficient to tackle the inner workings of an entire nation. She also includes far too many details of the mechanics of travel--missed buses, bad meals, hassles with taxi drivers, etc. Adams approaches travel writing with the same mannerly, elliptical style that distinguishes her fiction. The results are mixed. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
The narrative and descriptive talents of novelist Adams ( Caroline's Daughters ) are abundantly evident in her Mexican travelogue, not only in depictions of Mexico's spectacular landscapes and picturesque towns, but in her portrayals of natives and tourists. She also writes of the companions with whom she explored Baja California, Oaxaca, Cuernavaca, the ruins of Palenque, etc. While the art of Frida Kahlo in Mexico City inspires Adams's highest praise, her "addiction" to the "magic" of Mexico grows from her feeling that its romantic beauty more than compensated for the "vicissitudes . . . of the whole boring, tiresome trip," detailed recitals of which readers may indeed find tiresome. Certainly, her account of misadventures in Tuxtla Gutierrez and other sites that met with her disapproval will deter readers from including them on their itineraries.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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