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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I Loved It., December 29, 2009
This review is from: At the Table of Want (Paperback)
First, a word about the rating system, which I have borrowed from Alice Wakefield.

* 5 stars are reserved for works that reach the level of a Steinbeck, Mark Twain, etc.
* 4 stars from me are very high praise, meaning outstanding & highly recommended.
* 3 stars means I enjoyed the book and recommend it, with some reservations

At the Table of Want by Larry Kimport is a five-star story. I've read only one other book this year that earned five stars and that was 600 Hours of Edward, a novel by Craig Lancaster. I may have given five stars to books I read and reviewed prior to adopting Alice Wakefield's rating system in June 2009, but those reads are four-star books, all of them.
After I started reading At the Table of Want, it was a struggle not to drop everything else and read nonstop. Hooked, I was, but I managed to resist the urge to throw everything else aside, like my marriage, putting out the trash, eating and sleeping, and only read late at night or early in the morning for a limited time. Still, I finished Kimport's novel in record time, and I often thought of the story during the day. Each night as I picked up the book, it was like that slice of apple pie after not having one for several months.

Truman Kramer is the main character. He is orphaned young and ends up being raised by his loving Aunt Mabel, a widow. However, the story doesn't start with Truman's childhood. Chapter 1 starts in 1980 at 35,000 feet in a wide-bodied 747. Truman is on his way to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, because he joined the Peace Corps soon after high school graduation.

The other Peace Corps volunteers, mostly college graduates, are of the opinion that Truman will be one of the first to quit and return home. How wrong they are and Truman's decision to stay in Malaysia and work with poverty-stricken, abused, handicapped children, a job none of the other Peace Corps volunteers want is what makes this story powerful.

The structure of the story may not make sense at first (it's still good reading), but by the time you are halfway through the book, you will be glad that the author wrote it that way. In the early chapters, the story alternates between Malaysia and Truman as a child seeing his mother die, being taken care of by an older man, then his Aunt Mabel, and the bully incident that sent Truman to a juvenile boy's home prison-like facility for a year when he was a teen (he was framed, but the bully got what he deserved).

Because of the structure the author uses, we learn why it makes sense that Truman would have so much compassion for the abandoned, abused handicapped children--all special education types, and Truman is not a teacher--he's never been to college and has no training to work with these kids.

The conditions these children live in are horrible. When Truman first sees them, most are naked, filthy and live in a concrete structure surrounded by trash and weeds--sort of like a rundown, bombed-out storage facility after a war. They have been abandoned by their families and their culture to be hidden away with no chance at any life worth living. Then Truman makes his decision and just thinking about what he did for those kids brings tears to my eyes.

Don't jump to conclusions. Truman is no saint. He drinks too much and has an affair with a skinny, bony, married, Malaysian Chinese woman, who is several years older than he is. This is not your standard, escapist, formula romance, and that plot line adds to the story too.

Malaysia is an Islamic country and adultery is a risky venture at best. That is why I did something I've never done before in the fifty-plus years I've been reading books (thousands of them). With more than a hundred pages to go, I was worried that Truman was going to be caught and punished by the Islamic government of Malaysia, so I read the ending several days before I finished the book.

If you want to discover what happens, you will have to buy the book and join Truman in Southeast Asia. Know this, the pleasure I gained from reading this book was not from the conclusion but in the story that a skilled pen crafted. The story is so convincing, I suspect that Larry Kimport must have been in the Peace Corps and lived in Malaysia for a few years. Halfway through the book, I wondered how much of this story was autobiographical. The details are that rich--that vivid.

I highly recommend At the Table of Want. Occasionally (only a few times), there would be a phrase or clause that didn't make sense to me as the author attempted to construct a sentence that had a poetic quality to it, but that was rare and it didn't diminish the story. The story works and so do ninety-nine percent of those poetic sentence constructions. Thank you, Larry Kimport, for taking me on a trip to Truman's Malaysia. I started a boutique press this year, and this is the kind of book I want to publish--one that goes beyond assembly line, formula fiction.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gritty realism and authenticity, September 8, 2010
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This review is from: At the Table of Want (Paperback)
Initially I was drawn to this book by the setting. After all, it is rare to find protagonist from the mid to southern part of New Jersey, so I was interested in the descriptions of his home and school and even of his experience in the local institution after two difficult and life altering situations with a dreadful bully. However, the book is much more than local description and flavor, as well written and solid as they are, for the reader finds Truman's outlook and understanding concerning his life and love are universal in the human experience so that in reading, one early and quickly shares the heart of this young man.

Through his journaling Truman reveals vivid scenes of hardship as he undertakes an assignment in Malaysia through the Peace Corps and through the letters written to him by the wife of a local merchant, a love affair begins for a young man, who has never even kissed a girl. In creating his task of refurbishing a school/home, which is little more than an old, empty shell of a garage, Truman begins the task of recreating himself and the healing of this deeply wounded soul begins. Kimport offers in his novel a gritty realism not often found in coming of age novels. Its authenticity of setting and character is memorable, and I found myself thinking about Truman long after I had read the final chapter.
At the Table of Want
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At the Table of Want
At the Table of Want by Larry Kimport (Paperback - October 21, 2009)
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