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End of I.
 
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End of I. [Hardcover]

Stephen Dixon (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 12, 2006
Three years ago, McSweeney’s published Stephen Dixon’s acclaimed I. Now, the two-time National Book Award nominee revisits that book’s intimate territory, tightening his unflinching focus even as he widens the scope. Dixon is still a master stylist, and the narrator’s
tense, breakneck reflections on loss in all contexts are imbued with remarkable urgency and warmth.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

The surprise is not only how funny Dixon can be but also how unutterably sad... [Dixon] takes a reader's heart and just plain dropkicks it.A" -San Francisco Chronicle His circular, self-aware prose can be entrancing.A" -New York Times Book Review Stephen Dixon is one of the great secret masters. -Jonathan Lethem "You have to go into a Dixon book the way you'd go into a game of strip poker: ready to end up naked. He gives it to you straight, and means every word. He is the least pretentious living writer." -J. Robert Lennon

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 200 pages
  • Publisher: McSweeney's (July 12, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1932416536
  • ISBN-13: 978-1932416534
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #956,982 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dixon Is Getting Better and Better, August 27, 2006
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This review is from: End of I. (Hardcover)
End of I. is the third installment in a trilogy of sorts that also includes I. and Old Friends.

The middle book, Old Friends, was originally titled Two, but was rewritten before final publication, and its characters given names (whereas the focal character in the other two books was simply I. or He.) But the characters in all three books are clearly one in the same, and, one would assume, autobiographical, since they share many of Dixon's own life circumstances.

Like the first two books, End of I. is nonlinear, taking the scattershot trajectory of I.'s memories, instead, as its structure. The book has the valedictory tone of an old man trying to make sense of all he has seen and heard and experienced, but it simultaneously posits an ongoing and healthy future, however fragile it might consider the possibility of that future to be. There is much reckoning with the physical manifestations of aging, especially in the recurring struggles I. has in caring for his wife, who is suffering from a debilitating illness.

I. is also wrestling with his own regrets, self-justifications, and so on, often regarding his own admitted selfish desires to carve out time and a private space to write or read or think or carry on his preferred daily routines. An especially pleasing interlude finds I. remembering his mother-in-law's summer visits, which at the time he found intrusive and annoying, but which he now wishes he could relive, and that he could have been kinder and more understanding of her.

This is a typical kind of complication of character that the book returns to again and again. I. will simultaneously want and not want something. He will resolve not to do the thing he eventually does, and will wish he had not done it and also be somewhat glad that he had done it. Whatever happens, Dixon seems to be saying, we humans have agency, but then again we don't, and then again, we do. It depends. It's complicated. We are generous and cruel, and both at once. There are reasons we do what we do, but who knows why we do what we do?

The writing is Dixon house style, with the long paragraphs and the long back-and-forth of dialogue, and the recursive nature of everything as the characters circle around and around their chapterly predicament (for most of the chapters are thematically driven, and take on a specific inter- or intrapersonal problem from I.'s present, past, or sometimes future.)

The writing continues to be experimental as regards form, but not in any sort of annoying showy way. An artful artlessness has crept into the writing in these later books. Dixon does not at all seem concerned with anything except laying bare his character. The result is a deep and growing readerly empathy as the story progresses. You feel like you're living in I.'s head, and feeling everything along with him.

Nothing much happens, plot-wise, in End of I. If that bothers you, maybe it's not the book for you. On the other hand, all kinds of things happen, character-wise. By the end of this book, though, you feel like you know everything about I., except his name. And that feeling is amplified if you've read all the books in the trilogy.

No need, by the way, to read these three books in order. The nonlinear arrangement accommodates just about any order of reading. I'd recommend, in fact, starting with Old Friends, since it is a single unified narrative (and a quick read), then moving on to End of I., then ending with I. My guess, though, is that among readers of these books, there will be as many opinions about the way to read them as there are, well, readers.

In any case, these books reward a slow, leisurely read. There is a real pleasure in letting I.'s reckoning with his own life unfold at his own pace, and in his own loopy, digressive pattern of recollection.

Now, late in his career, Dixon has taken on and completed perhaps his most ambitious project, which, in the wake of Frog and the Gould saga, is saying quite a lot. I think that these books are an overwhelming success, and I wish them thousands more thoughtful and patient readers willing to surrender themselves to the pleasures to be found inside.

Dixon, it's rumored, doesn't have any use for the Internet, so I'm fairly certain he won't see this review. That makes me sad, because I wish he could know that, at least for this one reader in the middle of Ohio, he's said his say, and said it in a way no one else could. I couldn't think of a better gift for a writer to offer a reader. So, thank you, Stephen Dixon, wherever you are.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Dixon's style is incredible, February 28, 2010
This review is from: End of I. (Hardcover)
I sort of stumbled across this book. The McSweeny's label drew me in, and the hardcover cutout of the I in the title of the front flap kept me interested. After reading this book, I now regret not knowing about Dixon sooner.

His style sort of reminds me of Hubert Selby Jr., not in the content (Dixon's content is much lighter than Selby), but in the way that he can pack such strong emotions/reactions into very direct and serious sentences. But there's also a strange "playfulness" in his style. The chapter BROTHER is a good example of this. It's hard to explain, but he's telling a memory and he starts, then restarts, then restarts a sentence again and again. But it flows so smoothly that it becomes a piece of written art. In this way, the style made me think of George Saunders and his style of wordplay.

This is a great book and I highly recommend it.
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