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Reviewed by Lit Amri for Readers' Favorite
Based on a true story, Șehrazad Ayşe Uslu’s The Roots That Clutch is about how a young woman, Jane, discovered through her PhD research on T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound about her grandmother’s affair with the great American Modernist, William Carlos Williams - which further leads to a surprising family secret. I have not read a 'bildungsroman' for quite a while and The Roots That Clutch shows me why I should start reading this type of novel again. Emotionally attractive, poetically as well as historically sound, we follow her personal journey that spans 21 years and takes place at manuscript libraries in Europe and the United States, as well as universities such as Leyden and Manchester.
The stodgy and conceited atmosphere that the protagonist has to endure reminds me of some of my own unpleasant moments in university back in the days. As a student, Jane is constantly the victim of academic politics, yet at the same time she is supported by a few well-connected scholars who believe in her innate perspective in poetry. It is vividly written with the protagonist’s personal formative years revolving around her family secret of William Carlos Williams, an iconic figure in modern literature. Her failed marriage is another big wrench thrown into her life, but Jane soldiers on as she slowly unravels the deeper connections between Eliot, Pound, and their late nineteenth century British predecessors. On the whole, Uslu’s work is multi-layered and undeniably a compelling mix of poignancy, hopefulness, and of course, poetic justice.