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The Whipping Boy [Mass Market Paperback]

Beth Holmes (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 543 pages
  • Publisher: Jove (1979)
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B000GRC38E
  • Product Dimensions: 6.9 x 4.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,488,866 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Embarrassment of Riches, April 30, 2000
This review is from: The Whipping Boy (Hardcover)
What a novel! It has so much. You know no editor got his grubby hands on this one. Don't be put off by the title, which promises kinky melodrama. The book aims for social agitprop, but don't be put off by that, either. I do have one caveat: Beth Holmes has an unstated Christian agenda, in addition to the social one. It's unstated because it's taken as an absolute given. Some readers will quickly be alienated, around the point where the psychiatrist sits down to dinner with the disturbed family. If you're not horrified (as the psychiatrist is) that a father would allow his son to lead the family in saying grace--a permissiveness that is viewed by the author as sacrilege and horrific abuse--you'll probably be bewildered. And--just maybe--hooked.

The novel--about a demented Dad who drives his son nuts, while the boy's saintly mother fights to save him--calls for reform of child-abuse laws, which at the time of its writing punished only physical abuse. It dramatizes the need for parents to set boundaries, warning that a lack of discipline (i.e., spoiling them rotten) can be as cataclysmic as daily beatings. Some good old-fashioned, Christian discipline is what's called for. That's the pretense, anyway. The book illustrates something else: that the medium is, indeed, the message. The novel itself is like some freaky, naive, flipped-out adolescent, totally lacking in any sort of discipline or shame, filled with weird disgust. Holmes gooses her polemic with hysterical overwriting, zany plot-twists, and yes, kinky melodrama, as well as the occasional Dr.-Seuss-on-drugs rhyme: "Timmy was a twelve-year-old [expletive] in lunatic drag." And that's not dialogue.

Much of the story is rather far-fetched, even for a pot-boiler. True, the twelve-year-old protagonist is described as good-looking, but his father can't leave him in the office for a minute without a secretary jumping into his lap. (Naughty boy!) Daddy finds this very annoying, since he likes to conduct nude wrestling matches with the boy on the living room rug. He doesn't mind the kid trying to murder people, including his own mother, and he lets him hang out at bus stations wearing lipstick and a beret, threatening sailors, but this girl stuff is out. Inexplicably, he decides to put the family finances and stock portfolios in the kid's jittery hands and give him total carte blanche. When bankruptcy results, he chases the kid onto the roof, hurling large pieces of furniture at him.

Like little Timmy, you start to wonder what Mom ever saw in this guy. Helpfully, the novel flashes back to the 'fifties, to the budding romance between Dan and Evie. One evening, after a hot date, Dan accuses Evie of rape and attempted murder. Of him. Instead of running for her life, Evie finds his "vulnerability" irresistible. After the wedding, she doesn't wonder too much about why Dan's always going on about her "hard-boy body," or why he enjoys walking around nude in public while, er, "tucked." Dan is so nauseated by women that he can't even look at a drawing of a cow without getting sick. From here, the narrative sky-rockets into total delirium. Evie and Timmy flee into the Deep South, in search of Answers, all of which seem to lie somewhere in Dan's twisted childhood. Holmes can't think of a plausible device for this, so she has them stumble upon Dan's secret Second Home, which is curated by a little old man who calls himself the "Keeper of the Shrine." Inside, of course, is an exact replica of their home up north, right down to the shag carpets and track lighting, except for one room: a weird museum holding relics of Dan's perversion. This room has portraits of his parents and sibs--a rogues' gallery of Irish inbred peasants--all of whom died mysteriously; a photo of the male camp-counselor who gave him VD when he was ten; the steel wool his monstrous mother used to scrape off his sores; pictures of Dan dressed as a little girl; you get the picture. The kicker is Dan's huge, demented journal, which the Keeper has been trying to turn into a best-selling memoir. Yes: the always-secretive Dan hopes to make himself rich and admired by displaying his sexual warts (real and figurative) to the world. Psychoanalytic short-cuts don't get much lamer than this.

Reading this book, you get a creepy suspicion that the grotesque characters are somehow based on real people. You wonder what "Dan" ever did to Beth Holmes. You worry about all the prurient brilliance that went into her fantasia of homosexual self-loathing. The earnest, can-do, social proselytizing makes you a bit queasy. But anyone who finds this book "serious," "thoughtful," "complex," etc, ought to be put under observation. If you have a sense of irony, please, please read this social-diatribe/get-even memoir/Christian sex fable, tricked out in lunatic drag. You'll chuckle about it for years.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Should have been on Best Seller List, February 20, 2011
This review is from: The Whipping Boy (Hardcover)
This is story telling at its best - a story that should not be buried or ignored. I still have the paperback that was published in 1978. I keep this book, along with the few others that have made a great impact on my life and why this book never made the best seller listing is beyond me!!!!!!
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Whipping Boy, January 20, 2000
By 
Terry Russler (Massachusetts, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Whipping Boy (Paperback)
A must read for anyone going into social work. I have read this book over and over again and have never been dissapointed in the story. It is both frightening and sad in the respect that abuse can be in the form of abscured love. The books message is timely dispite the age of the book who's setting is in the 1960's. The characters are complex enough to allow a reader to understand the dynamics behind the bizarre behavior of the parents and children.
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