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Eustace Chisholm and the works [Import] [Hardcover]

James PURDY (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 250 pages
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape; 1st ed edition (1968)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0224613073
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224613071
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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 (4)
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3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars James Purdy at his best, April 20, 2001
By 
"mariposalily" (Tallahassee, FL USA) - See all my reviews
I find it hard to believe that James Purdy is so neglected when he is so good. If you're a fan of Flannery O'Conner, I urge you to read Purdy - you will not be disappointed. "Eustace Chisholm" is a stunning achievement. A compelling tale of unrequited love,self loathing, and horror. This is a great train wreck of a book, filled with charcaters and situations you may wish you'd never encountered, and yet you are compelled by forces ungovernable to continue reading. Yes, the material is dark. The characters fail to come together in any positive ways - quite the contrary. Purdy has populated his tale with emotional illiterates; people who most assuredly feel that God has forgotten them. The story of Amos and Daniel is rife with symbolism - innocence corrupted, love demonized, self flagellation - it's all here. The conclusion is quite stunning, horrible and real. Purdy is a true American original, a Gay author who wrote about gay people long before it was fashionable to do so. DO NOT LET THIS ONE GET AWAY UNREAD.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Color of Darkness, August 22, 2002
By 
"kokwim" (Haarlem, The Netherlands) - See all my reviews
No better way to start this short little review with one of the most beautiful titles ever found (by Purdy): Color of Darkness. Almost all of Purdy's work can be characterized by this metaphor. His most famous works (Eustace Chisholm, Malcolm, Narrow Rooms, In A Shallow Grave) belong to the most mysteriously beautiful American novels ever and the literature of the whole Western World. Truly American in characters, truly universal in themata, truly disturbing in effect. He reminded me of those other greatgreatgreat American authors, Flannery o'Connor, Faulkner and Poe. Younger authors like Easton Ellis and the likes of him are simply looking bleak and lifeless compared with Purdy, although i also liked reading them.

Purdy's work is really about Love and the disturbing effects of it on humans and the human society. Never was there an American author who understood so deeply the fundamental qualities and nature of Human Love, clearifying it, to make the reader understand, to feel the fundamental and terrible force of it. I can't even begin to tell about the beauty of his work. I read Eustace Chisholm, Narrow Rooms, In A Shallow Grave years and years ago, I don't even know whether Purdy lives or is dead, but the effect of his work is there, again and again, never to leave anymore. I can only wish there was more of such work.

I am so glad that there are still Americans who also appreciate his work, and that they write so highly regarding of him. People all over the world should read it, especially in these days when the ultimate form of love seems primarily to be transformed into the Love For...Homeland ...

Read it, for God's sake.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One-of-a-kind novel that defies easy categorization . ., January 15, 2004
. .
and top-notch all the way! EUSTACHE CHISHOLM AND THE WORKS doesn't fit into easy subgenre or marketing categorizations because its era (bottom of the Depression ca. 1931), setting (the incredibly diverse Hyde Park district of South Side Chicago, near the U. of Chicago campus) and cast of characters (de facto leader Eustace Chisholm and his "works," a bunch of guys semi-squatting in a tax-overdue house) are difficult to type after seventy years of New Deal, Joseph McCarthy, Vietnam, and Televangelism. Taken strictly on its own terms, EUSTACE comes across as a work of 1930s social realism (although written in the 1960s), a masterfully wrought work, nicely nuanced yet accessible . . . and great fun.

Principal players are title character Eustace Chisholm and his "works," a kind of rough-hewn rat pack who rely on their de facto leader's one-day-at-a-time problem-solving as they face the ironic stresses that the rest of the USA also faced during the early 1930s--living in a capitalist economy without capital. Their situation was hardly unique. From farm to town to metropolis, one-third of a nation found itself unemployed and--most trying of all--the Hoover administration, following pre-Keynesian economic policy, paradoxically pulled back on the federal money supply, upwardly sucking the currency from use, recovery and hope. (Think of Studs Terkel's *HARD TIMES* and other oral accounts of the Great Depression, the common refrain: "All of a sudden there was no money!") A great deal of this novel's comic tension lies between the conditional sympathy many readers will feel toward the lead characters and their demi-monde and the automatic fellow-feeling wired in the American DNA toward their economic plight as mass casualties of the Great Depression's fiscal meltdown.

In concert with Eustace's innate wisdom and street smarts, "The Works" understood that life in a money-free money economy made them something like Busby Berkeley's "Golddiggers" of movie fame: They were "in the money" because they "had a lot of what it [took] to get along." If that meant the occasional venture into horizontal service, well, German playwright Bertolt Brecht puts it nicely: *Erst das Fressen, dann die Moral*: "Food first, morals afterward." EUSTACE is certainly worth reading with a queer eye, but it is no more totally beholden to the canon of Gay Literature than is BABBITT totally a book about Real Estate.

It's Purdy's great gift--as previous reviewers have hymned so well--that he can find sweetness in the ordinary and in what (to many people) might sound sordid and mean. Crucial to this is that he does so without distortion, propagandizing or advocacy. This is REAL literature, and sadly overlooked at that. Eustace & Co. are a mixture of sugar and spice, compromise and charm. As such, they are just as much in the American grain as Mose and Addie Pray in the novella that sparked the movie *PAPER MOON*: shrewd little Addie understands that sometimes a five-buck Bible might be worth $50 to a wealthy widow and sometimes--as to a poverty-wracked farm family--the only compassionate thing is to give it away as "prepaid". And what are more quintessentially 20th-Century American than marketing compounding by the pinpoint timing of arbitrage?

Purdy is such a gifted narrator that he shows the compelling and even witty existential freedom of that pre-Holocaust, pre-AIDS world in which the only givens truly were death and taxes--but either could be held at bay for quite a while with cunning and friendly solidarity. This book speaks to a "modern"--which is to say universal--sensibility. Read it with an open mind and you'll find it will go straight to an open heart, with frequent forays into your funny bone and social awareness.

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First Sentence:
Eustace Chisholm's street, with the Home for the Incurables to the south and the streetcar line to the west, extended east up to blue immense choppy Lake Michigan. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Daniel Haws, Captain Stadger, Amos Ratcliffe, Cousin Ida, Eustace Chisholm, Beaufort Vance, Clayton Harms, Reuben Masterson, Private Haws, Maureen O'Dell, Luwana Edwards, Sampford Court, Miss O'Dell, Carla Chisholm, Mister Chisholm, Make-Believe Dance Hall, South Parkway, Washington Park, Attic Greek, Ida Henstridge, Chicago Tribune, Christian Science, Kansas City, Lake Michigan, Mississippi Sound
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