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Though Dr. Morales is dead-on about his patient's inertia, his antic method gives the term critical care (not to mention shrink wrap) new meaning. Indeed, Jake and his doctor's hostilities are both hilarious and deeply painful, skidding between progress and "emotional vivisection." Is the foul-mouthed, foul-minded Morales a sport of psychiatric nature, or is he on the right track? Neither patient nor reader will ever be quite sure, though Jake does come out of his long slump, inheriting the responsibility for his own life--and those of several others.
The Treatment ruffles with comic energy and risky shifts, but also with something increasingly rare in fiction--tenderness. Menaker, unlike his protagonist, seems unafraid of emotion and has a perfect ear for the momentary exchange that simultaneously reveals and conceals all. He can also dish up epigrams with the best of them. Jake turns Wallace Stevens's hieratic pronunciamento into a surprising home truth: "If death is in fact the mother of beauty, she never spends any time with her kids." Any reader interested in the fresh pleasures of language, character, and sharp social landscaping should look no further. The Treatment is both a merry novel about loss and a melancholy fiction about the pleasures of intimacy--sexual, familial, and, of course, therapeutic. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Witty and satifying, but somewhat flawed.,
By JT (Riverdale) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Treatment (Paperback)
Menaker has an original concept, and a good handle on the higjly implausible, but no less hilarious character of Dr. Morales, the eccentric, Spanish therapist treating Jake Singer, the story's narrator. Jake is in his early thirties, a teacher at a local Manhattan prep school and suffering from defeatism and despair. The author never really delves into the cause of this dubious psychosis, other than having Morales connect it to the early death of Jake's mother and his estrangement from his father, and the overall book is diminished slightly for it. On the other hand, watching Morales obnoxiously push Jake to overcome his problems, while seemingly, paradoxically, encouraging them, is the meat of the novel, funny, touching and provocative. Is Dr. Morales really trying to cure Jake, or is he actually dependent on him, as Jake sometimes thinks, and reluctant to declare him finished with the treatment? As Jake begins to achieve success, both professionally and in his love life, Morales seems more determoned than ever to keep Jake in treatment. Jake wonders, as does the reader, if Morales might be living vicariously though him, especially when he insists on intimate details of every sexual act Jake and his new lover perform. The verbal fencing between therapist and patient is always witty and often revealing, and raises interesting questions about the nature of therapy and of the patient/therapist dynamic. Menaker graciously declines to give any concrete evidence concerning Dr. Morale's possibly conflicted motives, which allows the reader to either agree with Jake or not. This reader would have liked to see more of the sessions and their manifestations in Jake's life, and less of the distracting sublot suddenly introduced midway through the book concerning Jake's lover's adopted daughter and her original birth mother. The switch in stories, as well as narrators (from Jake to third person) was disconcerting and not becoming in what was otherwise an intimate and cleverly wrought novel.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Weak ending almost ruined it for me.,
By Sara E Kelley (Baltimore, MD USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Treatment (Paperback)
This book realistically and humorously portrays the analyst-patient relationship, although the analyst character, Dr. Morales, is drawn with extreme hyperbole. I disagree with the reviewers who found Jake's constant correction of Dr. Morales's English to be racist. Actually, I think this makes *Jake* look priggish, stubborn, and "resistant," and that that was precisely the author's intention. Unfortunately, although I found this book extremely entertaining, at the end the plot relies too heavily on unbelievable coincidences to wrap things up; it appears that Menaker just couldn't think of a more credible way to get his characters out of the mess he got them into.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Treater approves of The Treatment,
By Donald R. Fleck (Brooklyn, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Treatment (Paperback)
I couldn't stop laughing. While Menaker describes an outlandish psychoanalytic treatment that greatly lightened my reading for a few days, at the same time he subtly and accurately shows a patient progressing within it. Or in opposition to it. Any therapist will enjoy this send-up about "the last Freudian," as will anyone who has spent some time on the couch.
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