From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a mature, accomplished book of the human heart,
By jack (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cosmology of Bing (Hardcover)
Coming on the heels of his third novel "Tideland," Mitch Cullin returns with his best effort to date, offering a novel that is as funny and insightful as it is sad and moving. Alternating chapters between downbeat alcoholic astronomy professor Bing, and undrgrad student Nick (the oblivious object of Bing's affection), "The Cosmology of Bing" chronicles the complicated relationship that can form between student and teacher. Throughout the characters are carefully rendered and true, even the ghostly wife Susan, and never once does a false note ring.When Bing's unwelcome advances finally reach a head, we learn too that Nick's own being is in question. As a result, Nick's touching relationship with his gay roommate opens a door for forgiveness and real affection. Careful never to lecture the reader or hammer his opinions home, Cullin touches on several key issures: the differences between welcome advances and unwelcome ones, the betrayal of the trust between a teacher who should know better and the young student who blindly admires him, and the consequences of those who lie to themselves rather than face inevitable truths. Added to this are beautifully written sections dealing with astronomy and short chapters containing Susan's haunting prose-like poems, both of which push the story forward smartly and suggest, as Susan writes in one section, that human affection is "a most confounding and mystifying thing." Without question, this book sits comfortably beside Cullin's first novel Whompyjawed, both of which rank higher to my taste than his darker "Branches" and "Tideland." His look at a larger city's university cliques is so dead on, yet like "Whompyjawed," he gives the reader an accurate feel for places as much as people. I recommand this mature, accomplished effort highly.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Rare and Great Read,
By Carlos Campbell (Santa Fe, NM) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cosmology of Bing (Hardcover)
Cosmology of Bing is a brilliant and fascinating read with compelling perspectives on the lives of students and faculty at a top private university, covering both their separate and intertwined worlds. There are rare, compelling, revealing and often painful perspectives on life and realities. There is Professor Bing Owen and his once beautiful wife, a brilliant poet struck prematurely with tragic health, and Nick Sulpy, a student Bing loves, and Nick's roommate Takashi. The book has wonderful characters and is spun through a yarn with fascinating metaphors on the realities of life on this earth and the vast universe beyond. Cullin's book is not what one always reads about universities, but is a rare insight into what literally occurs on campuses. I bought it via the NYT review, and found the super assessment to be be monumentally valid.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A beautiful, unflinching look at compliacted hearts,
By Shawn (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cosmology of Bing (Hardcover)
I bought this book based solely on its New York Times Review, and, for once, I can honestly say that that glowing review does justice to Mitch Cullin's incredibly funny, skillfully executed, and at times sad novel.Focusing on the lives of students and teachers at Moss University in Houston, though mainly examining the relationship between astronomy professor Bing Owen and his young student Nick, Cullin deftly brings to life a man who is his own worst enemy, and, in the most humorous and intelligent of ways, creates a devastating parody of academic delusion, infighting, and lechary. This is a smart novel, filled with smart people who trip miserable over their own feet--written clearly by someone who has spent a fair amount of time observing. And while the "happy" ending is perhaps my only minor qualm with this otherwise fine work, it still left this reader oddly disquieted and sensing Bing's world remained only briefly at ease. Mixing rich astronomical detail, curiously moving poetics, and accurately depicting jaundiced age colliding with naive youthfulness, Cullin has put together a fascinating story, one which sits comfortably in the ranks of Graham Swift and William Trevor. I look forward now to reading his earlier novels.
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