This Northern California ocean town, where shops have names like Love Me Two Times, Coffeetopia, Bunny's Shoes and the Tat Shack, is the last place you'd expect to find Jonathan Franzen.
Wetsuit-wearing surfers, yes. And partying college students, and weekenders down from San Francisco, about 90 minutes north. But the cerebral, non-sunburned, glasses-wearing 51-year-old recently hailed on the cover of Time magazine as a "Great American Novelist"? Not so much.
Franzen, who has an apartment in Manhattan, has spent 12 summers in Santa Cruz with his girlfriend, Kathryn Chetkovich, who grew up in the area. Two years ago they bought a pretty two-story house astride a dramatic ravine on the city's west side.
This summer, the Santa Cruz house has been Franzen's refuge before the coming literary storm. His big new novel, "Freedom" -- his first since "The Corrections" went huge in 2001 -- hit stores nationwide in late August. This week, Franzen begins a 20-city, three-month U.S. book tour that includes a Talking Volumes appearance in the Twin Cities on Sept. 21.
Based on early raves by leading critics, "Freedom" is likely to be Franzen's second book to combine two things that rarely go together: serious literature and mega sales.
"The Corrections," his third novel, sold nearly 3 million copies worldwide and was optioned by producer Scott Rudin for a movie (not yet made). Oprah chose it for her book club, but uninvited Franzen as a guest on her show after he went public with his misgivings about the selection. Sales rose.
That was a decade ago. "Freedom," which the New York Times hailed as "a masterpiece of American fiction" even "richer and deeper" than "The Corrections," is like its predecessor a maximal saga of a family at war with itself. It bumps against cultural and political flashpoints of the past three decades, including environmentalism, population growth, urban gentrification, sprawl, the rise of the Internet, the Bush presidencies, war in Iraq and the music industry.
Much of "Freedom" takes place not in the St. Louis that anchored earlier Franzen books, but in St. Paul.