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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Maddeningly Normal Family,
This review is from: The Big Book of Misunderstanding (Paperback)
"Do I have to end my life to end my childhood?" Josh Royalton asks. Jim Gladstone's first novel is a good-humored flashback on a family maddeningly normal at its disfunctional worst. So why is Josh about to swallow his dad's Clonazepam tablets?Unlike misunderstood gay kids whose alienation from family is a rite of passage perhaps more painful than their coming out, Josh was nearly loved to death. It's one of the cosmic ironies of the tale-that whatever Joshy, his brother Lewis, or mother `Becca do, they cannot get beyond Harris, the well-intentioned but controlling father, whose blind faith in their Ozzie and Harriet family appears unshakeable. Whatever they feel, dad assures them they're fine, all's well, they'll get over it, or he'll take care of it. As they flounder toward individuation, his obsessive manipulation drives them away. Lew takes to sports his dad can't coach and eventually escapes to California, leaving no address. `Becca takes psychology courses, gets a Ph.D., and divorces Harris to claim herself. And Josh drifts-still bound by his childhood and his dad's smothering influence, until he's on the edge of a nervous breakdown. He writes his book "to live through my twenty-two years again. I would set them to paper and set them to rest." With The Big Book of Misunderstanding he writes himself out of suicide. But if you think this book doesn't sound like fun, you misunderstand! It is one of the most original, honest, funny, and brilliantly written memoirs in lavender print. Gladstone's writing is irresistible, with refreshing, inimitable phrasing, sparkling verbs that cut like diamonds, and perfectly apt though unexpected new metaphors. His are sentences you underscore and star in the margins so you can find them again. When Josh's mother sends him to a psychiatrist (he was "caught up in a notion that I was probably a space alien ... rather than the true product of my nominal parents' sexual intercourse"), he passes the Rorschach test: " `What do you see here?' [the shrink] asked. Two erect penises, I thought. `Two blue giraffes,' I said. `And here?' Mega-vagina, obviously. `Butterfly,' I said." Dr. Friedman tells Mrs. Royalton that Josh is a pretty normal kid. "Right. He was totally worthless," Josh concludes. In another scene his worrisome mother phones him at college: "Was your trip back OK, honey?" "Yeah, Mom. It was fine. When I went to the snack bar on the train, I wore a condom in your honor." You will love these people, including delusional dad, who even long after the divorce declines invitations, pretending the family's still together. Everything he ever wanted has fallen apart, and he can't see he caused it. Josh never forgot The Big Book of Safety Fun, his father's gift when he and Lewis were little-another mistake; it terrified them with fables of frightening accidents, like being scalded from not pre-testing shower water. As the boys grew up, the book came to represent all their father's good-intentioned, wrong choices. In Josh's book, dad misunderstands his family; Josh misunderstands his parents and brother; but mostly, Josh misunderstands himself. Writing The Big Book of Misunderstanding reconciles him with his cloying childhood. Jim Gladstone dedicates his novel to his parents: "Beyond any book,/Beyond all words,/I love you."
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Bridget Loves Frankenbernie,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Big Book of Misunderstanding (Hardcover)
The TBBOM is a very well-described memory of a time when Bridget still loved Bernie and mucky-green bell-bottoms were on their first round of fashion. Like a Supressed Memory Recovery artist, Jim GLADSTONE reminds us why we gave up eating Count Chocula, despite the prize at the bottom of the box. He takes us on a journey that some us never wanted to be on in the first place, but had no say in the matter. We've all been through, "If I have to stop this car, my belt's coming off". GLADSTONE reminds us that, regardless of who we've grown into today, our destiny was shaped by a little brother's fear of a Satanic night light or a father's absolute disbelief of a family broken up. After finishing this Psych-Time Travel novel, you will end up right where you should be - asking yourself how you got here but thankful that you do not have to go back.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Confused young man comes to terms with his inclinations,
By
This review is from: The Big Book of Misunderstanding (Hardcover)
This is the story of the Royalton family, related by Josh Royalton who, at the age of 22, looks back over his life to date, contemplating whether or not he can continue; recounting the many events that have led to this situation.
It is a most enjoyable book, funny, sad, with very likeable and real characters. The dominating, ambitious, insensitive but loving father; the cynical brother; the restless mother; we have probably meet people like them. And then Josh himself, a most appealing individual, who as he matures gradually comes to recognise and accept his feelings for other men. There is no great plot to talk of, but that is part of its charm, for it is beautifully written, and one can truly enjoy the experience.
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