THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2019 // 19 BOOKMONGER Hummasti’s posthumous novel a love song to humanity ‘Forty Ways to Square a Circle’ a mighty fi ne read Every once in a while a novelist captures a place with such immediacy and creates a predicament with such immersive power, that the reader — when the phone rings in her own home, or the cat bumps against her leg wanting sup- per — will look up and won- der, “Where am I?” Such is the case with “Forty Ways to Square a Cir- cle,” a semi-autobiograph- ical novel about Casey Merriman, a high school lan- guage arts teacher who, over the course of spring semes- ter in 1996, watches as his school’s administration dis- mantles the humanities cur- riculum for a new emphasis on computer literacy. As if that weren’t dis- heartening enough, Mer- riman goes home every night to tend to his elderly aunt, whose grip on real- ity is crumbling away due to dementia. You might extrapolate some parallels there. Keep THIS WEEK’S BOOK “Forty Ways to Square a Circle” By Neil Hummasti Svensen Pioneer Press 224 pp $18.95 reading, and you’ll fi nd more to chew on. This novel has been pub- lished posthumously. Author Neil Hummasti was an Asto- ria resident who died of can- cer in 2011. He had a long career as a high school English teacher and coach. On the side, he wrote prodi- giously: essays, tracts, short stories and novels. Upon Hummasti’s death, his brother discovered this writing cache, along with dozens of complimentary rejection slips from top New York publishing houses. Deciding it was high time that these works reached the reading public, Arnie Hum- masti formed Svensen Pio- neer Press and has begun publishing these works to honor and share his broth- er’s legacy. “Forty Ways to Square a Circle” is set in the fi ctional town of Coboway (named after a real-life Clatsop chief who befriended Lewis & Clark), on the Oregon side of the Lower Columbia River. Just as those explor- ers from two centuries ear- lier had bemoaned the rain, Hummasti also takes repeated note of the consis- tently dank weather of the place. It tends to reinforce the protagonist’s gloomy out- look on his situation in life. Merriman is increas- ingly thwarted by the ding- bat principal who runs his school, and by his once vivacious aunt’s downward spiral. Oh, sure, there are bright spots in his days. Among his colleagues, he counts spirited language arts teacher Doria Herrera and long-in-the-tooth science teacher Kit Early as friends. Merriman draws strength from his students, too, and they in turn are engaged in the work he sets before them. His own dreams and potential, however, have been smothered by disap- pointments and obligations, and midlife torpor has set in. But then a school shoot- ing shakes things up, and an improbable love triangle manifests, and a drowning occurs, and a life-threaten- ing diagnosis is revealed. Merriman is nudged out of his rut and prompted to take a rash action that will force him to see things anew. “Forty Ways to Square a Circle” is an erudite story, layered with obser- vations on the human con- dition that extend from the ancient Greeks to pop cul- ture of the late 20th century. It’s a forceful argument for teaching the humanities, and a poignant love song to humanity — and other liv- ing things. Best of all, it’s a mighty fi ne read. The cover art of Neil Hummasti’s ‘Forty Ways to Square a Circle,’ drawn by Dave McMacken. Svensen Pioneer Press The Bookmonger is Bar- bara Lloyd McMichael, who writes this weekly col- umn focusing on the books, authors and publishers of the Pacifi c Northwest. Con- tact her at bkmonger@ nwlink.com. COASTER THEATRE PLAYHOUSE FEBRUARY 1-23, 2019 Tickets $20 or $25 Shows begin at 7:30 p.m. Sunday shows starts at 3:00pm Sponsored by Mike & Tracey Clark Tickets: 503-436-1242 or coastertheatre.com 108 N Hemlock Street, Cannon Beach, OR The Illahee Apartments Why Live Anywhere Else? 1046 Grand Avenue Astoria, OR 97103 503-325-2280