Triangle
By Katharine Weber
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 242 pp., $23
Katharine Weber has been praised for writing novels with the puzzle plot of a mystery but the attention to style and characterization of literary fiction. ``Triangle" is a case in point, as Weber imaginatively reconfigures a historical tragedy, the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire , which stood for 90 years as New York's deadliest disaster.
In the late summer of 2001, Esther Gottesfeld, at 106 the last survivor of the fire, is finally letting go of her long, long life and her terrible memories of enveloping flames, burning flesh, desperate victims plunging to the ground. There are odd inconsistencies in Esther's oft-told tale. But the few people who still listen -- Esther's granddaughter, Rebecca; Rebecca's companion, George, an award-winning composer; and the feminist ``herstorian" Ruth Zion -- are too close to it to discern a pattern, though Weber takes care to evoke their intelligence with charm and respect. Rebecca, a geneticist, will eventually analyze the clues and unlock the mystery, while George's music will offer a transcendent resolution.
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