cover image Love and Other Consolation Prizes

Love and Other Consolation Prizes

Jamie Ford. Ballantine, $28 (320p) ISBN 978-0-8041-7675-0

In this uneven novel from Ford (Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet), the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair brings back memories for Ernest Young, né Yung Kun-ai, a man in his 60s. In 1902, Ernest travels in steerage to the United States and ends up in a Seattle orphanage. In 1909 he’s auctioned off at the World’s Fair, becoming a houseboy in an upscale brothel in the Tenderloin district. There he befriends Fahn, a Japanese girl who was in steerage with him seven years prior, and Maisie, the madam’s daughter, falling in love with both of them. Back in 1962, it’s made clear that Ernest’s ailing wife, now called Gracie, shares his difficult past—but which girl he married frustratingly isn’t revealed until late in the book. Their grown children, Hanny, a Vegas dancer, and Juju, a journalist, don’t have the full story about their parents’ history until Juju discovers an article about a boy auctioned off at the 1909 fair whose name was “Ernest” and wants to delve further into it. Despite the book’s flaws, Ford nevertheless excels at juxtaposing Seattle in the 1910s, with its Temperance movements, prostitution, and political involvement in the city’s underbelly, against the glitter and promise of the 1962 World’s Fair. (Sept.)