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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scenes from an interesting life
Jonathan Ames began this first novel while in college. Self-deprecatingly, he's written elsewhere that he "prematurely ejaculated [it] at 25." It's a sad and sometimes haunting story told in a forty-odd often gem-like short chapters. A boy: his family, his childhood and adolescence, and his present life, which veers between feeling like too much ("I'm an...
Published on August 22, 2001 by Eileen Galen

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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars satisfying but unfulfilling
I came to "I Pass Like Night" after reading "The Extra Man". "The Extra Man" was disturbing, comic, and sad. "I Pass Like Night" is just sad. Ames has great talent but he wastes them on characters who are not worth knowing. The world Ames describes is interesting but he hasn't made the characters sympathetic enough to hold...
Published on October 19, 1999


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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scenes from an interesting life, August 22, 2001
This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
Jonathan Ames began this first novel while in college. Self-deprecatingly, he's written elsewhere that he "prematurely ejaculated [it] at 25." It's a sad and sometimes haunting story told in a forty-odd often gem-like short chapters. A boy: his family, his childhood and adolescence, and his present life, which veers between feeling like too much ("I'm an apple with a razor inside") and too little - each and every day.

Protagonist Alexander Vine is adored by his mother, who has told him "If anything happened to you, my life would be over." He has problems with his father (he cannot bear to hear him eat). He goes to summer camp and gets poison ivy. He plays in the woods with friends as a child. He totals the family car playing "Starsky and Hutch" with a buddy. He loves his great-aunt, and mourns the loss of his grandfather. He's afraid of a lot of things. He's afraid of germs, but likes bums, drunks, and street people very much.

The adult Vine at times can barely get out the door. "I spent the whole day moving in and out of consciousness between naps and reveries, counting the hours until the free phone-sex message would change." He recalls the details of a wholly conventional and loving middle-class family and upbringing (sometimes with a lot of humor). He frequents peep shows and prostitutes. He is a good friend to his friends. Sex with both men and women (and there is a lot of it in his story) means everything and nothing to the protagonist: excitement, anticipation, surrender and the hope of communion, an escape from boredom. But the event never quite succeeds the way he hopes that it will. He wants passion and love - and never gives up hope.

Like F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Crack-Up," these interesting pieces vary in length and in mood, are arresting and varied, are either autobiographical or not, and together form a terrifically cohesive whole. I enjoyed this novel very much.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dark, perverse, seamy, and sad., July 22, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
"I Pass Like Night" is the first novel by Jonathan Ames, who has gone on to write the very funny, "The Extra Man," and whose ribald and eccentric (and frequently hilarious) columns appear in the free weekly, The NY Press, in NYC. Today, Ames' writing has a light feel about it, as if he is flittling through troubled waters without a care. "I Pass Like Night" does not have that quality. It is dark and seamy, and the protagonist frequently seems genuinely confused and afraid of the world. The subject matter -- sex of every shape and variation -- is his forte. Here, unlike in his columns where he frequently encounters women, or in "The Extra Man," where he frequents transvestite hookers, Ames begins in a park with a hooker and progresses (?) to being picked up and virtually raped by men. It is not funny like his present writing. That said, it is a very engaging book. Through reminiscences of his childhood, we get a glimpse of why he is the way he is. And that is very rare today. Very little writing does that, or even attempts to go there. (The writing on the HBO series "The Sopranos" does this with great skill.) I do prefer "The Extra Man" to "I Pass Like Night," but I own them both, have read them both more than once, and recommend them both. Jonathan Ames is a very entertaining writer. Twenty years from now, I suspect we might consider his stuff "important."
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What's Not to Love About This Book?, December 5, 2003
By 
Sohni (Chicago, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Hardcover)
well i have just finished a lengthy fan letter to Mr. Ames thanking him for all the literary treasures he has graced me with. I Pass Like Night is not unlike his other stories in which the central characters (seemingly based on Ames himself) all share a certain role of the loney, self-depracating, pathetic, and perverted young man. But whilst you are deep into the scattering experiences of Alexander Vine, Night's main character,you notice that nothing has really been started or solved. there is no real story here but a collection of character experiences that have made Mr. Vine somewhat of an adult child just wanting to be saved. Like all of Ames writing that i find to hold the feeling of perversion and lonlieness while still being comical, this is definitly a heavier work that depicts the life of a character who is lost and never quite found in NYC. I Pass Like Night is appropriately titled as well ,as Mr. Vine seems to survive by floating in and out of each experience totally aware that he is not much more than a mere existance. This is a wonderful book that feels for the lost souls.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "In Our Time"...of our time, May 1, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
All of the sexual inconsistencies of Ames' first-person narrators form a collective metaphor for the human condition, at least the part that's honest enough to admit it: we're all just as curious about, and inconsistent with, our sexuality at some point between puberty and death. Ames' narrators are simply refusing to follow the popular and convenient trend of bracketing sexuality...
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Delicate and Devastating, March 22, 2001
By 
Aaron S. Cohn (Collinsville, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
This is an exceptionally moving, delicately structured novel. The (anti)hero is a product of brutal psychological abuse at the hands of a weepy father whose despair and self-hatred graft themselves onto his young son's body, haunting the son on his self-obliterating path through life. The examination of the young man's own desparate need and failure to give and receive love are the novel's greatest, and most devastating, accomplishments. The unflinching manner and lightness of touch land Ames somewhere between Plath and Hemingway. ... ...
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gripping and satisfactory..., April 1, 1998
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This review is from: I PASS LIKE THE NIGHT (Paperback)
Funny that this book is out of print...With so many lovers of Salinger's "A Cathcher in the Rye," would think that this book would still be in some demand... Existentialist? YES! And all a part of the beauty of the work. Excellent book! Excellent author! I would certaibly buy another copy if reprinted...
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Apple with a Razor Blade, May 11, 2000
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This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
There is a real sweetness about Jonathan Ames' writing. Like Richard Brautigan, he uses simple sentence structures that allow us to experience incredible events with a sense of wonder. The sexual subject matter juxtaposed with the innocence of the writing style generates a creative tension which illuminates the inner conflict between Alexander, the main character, and the world he inhabits. The image Ames uses is of Halloween and finding the apple with the razor blade in it. Ultimately, that is the universal characteristic we experience that makes the material accessible, the incredibly human experience of having the good and the bad, the perfect and the imperfect, combined. I'm glad both "I Pass Like Night" and "The Extra Man" are out in paperback and am looking forward to Ames' new book "What's Not to Love." I wonder how he might write a female protagonist. Ames is fresh and well-written. Enjoy the apple but watch out for the razor blade!
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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars satisfying but unfulfilling, October 19, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
I came to "I Pass Like Night" after reading "The Extra Man". "The Extra Man" was disturbing, comic, and sad. "I Pass Like Night" is just sad. Ames has great talent but he wastes them on characters who are not worth knowing. The world Ames describes is interesting but he hasn't made the characters sympathetic enough to hold your interest.

I felt like a voyeur watching the couplings of others while reading the book. At no point was I interested in joining the fray. Mainly because Ames did not people the book with anyone attractive enough to entice me. My advice, skip this book and go right to "The Extra Man".

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3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Thanks for the story but I do not know why you told me, October 10, 2001
By 
R. Wooldridge (Waltham Abbey UK) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
This is a slim volume with slim achievements. It intends to build a picture from a series of little stories that you and I might tell whilst waiting, for only a short time, at the bus stop. The shame is that it is well written. There are images from his current life, childhood and adolesence, private thoughts, people he loves, knows and meets on the streets. At first I decided that it was an overlong short story but, on reflection, realise that it is a framework upon which a proper novel could have been built. I know very little about this young man and do not care either. I met him at the bus stop, he told me his story de jour, I got on the bus and forgot him.
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0 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The glamour of a looser??, April 12, 2002
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This review is from: I Pass Like Night (Contemporary Classics (Washington Square Press)) (Paperback)
Some anthropologists argue that one of the characteristics of humans is the need to rationalise its actions no matter how absurd and contradictory they might be. Here, the main character decides to be a looser, as a consequence of its sexual ambivalence. However the would like to be nearby were the glamorous and the powerful gather to eat so he becomes a porter at the Four Seasons hotel in New York surviving from the tips offered by the wealthy patrons. So far so good as the topic of a novel. However, the author is incapable to offer a physiological portrait of Alexander Vine. The book is not disturbing, it is not funny, it is not shocking. You might get more insight about the sexual underground of New York watching 5 minutes of Sex and the City than from this book.
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