Amazon.com Review
Elbert--a.k.a. Triple E--Earl Evans, brings new meaning to the term "Problem Child." According to his teacher and unstoppably positive moral supporter, Miss Bridgewater, Triple E has "more poetry in his soul than he knows." That may be the case, but it's a long, frightening journey to wherever that poetry lies buried. On its surface,
Too Cool follows our young hellion protagonist as he busts out of reform school and into the raging heart of a Colorado blizzard, where he finds himself fighting for his own survival and that of his faithful sweetheart Jeanne. Beneath that, however, Duff Brenna's third fictive endeavor is the tale of Triple E's lifelong trek across another frozen landscape--a seemingly hopeless past, present, and future populated by a drunkard father, shady friends, a little bad luck, a lot of bad choices, and a hopelessly twisted psyche, equal parts fury and seriously misplaced sexual longing.
Brenna isn't as engagingly psychosexual as Dennis Cooper or as humorous or hip as Denis Johnson. He does, however, demonstrate a special kind of bravery in creating his lead character. When Triple E isn't engaging in bad-ass posturing or self-hatred, he's beating the snot out of drunks, for a few dollars or just for the heck of it. He's not an easy guy to like. Given this, the wonder is that the prose moves along at a fairly steady clip, though the reader can occasionally feel as bludgeoned as one of Triple E's boxing opponents. --Bob Michaels
From Publishers Weekly
Again displaying the versatility evident in his warmly received The Book of Mamie and The Holy Book of the Beard, Brenna has created a poignant portrait of an antisocial youth bent on violence and self destruction. Despite his undeniable intelligence and sensitivity, there may be no saving 16-year-old Elbert Earl "Triple E" Evans from a life of escalating delinquency and danger. Chronciling a life-and-death car chase with police through a Colorado blizzard, Brenna takes readers on a captivating tour through the memories and dreams of Triple E as he reflects?with little regret?on the (mostly) bad things he has done. Having broken out of reform school in the stolen car of a pretty psychologist who made him her pet project, Triple E picks up his friend and criminal cohort, Tom Patch, his cousin Ava (who is sweet on Tom) and his girlfriend, Jeanne Windriver. His deep, self-sacrificing love for Jeanne is one of many qualities that give Triple E a complexity beyond the anarchic destructiveness of his actions. Stuck with Jeanne in the deep snow of a remote mountain road, Triple E reflects?sometimes involuntarily?on everything that brought him to this point as he marshals his remaining strength in an effort to save her life. Pacing his narrative with the suspense of a thriller, Brenna writes grippingly and with uncanny insight into the mind and heart of this violent, unforgettable character who, despite his youth and the untapped good within him, is likely irredeemable.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.