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29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hors commerce (mais bien sur), May 1, 2006
This review is from: Whores for Gloria: A Novel (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
I read an interview with Mr. Vollman, I think a couple years ago, I can't quote directly but he said he thought that prostitutes were very spiritual people. They save marriages, they provide comfort to the loneliest, most desperate among us. In practically the same breath he observed that they spread disease and sometimes rob their johns.

That kind of duality is at the heart of much of Vollman's writing. On the surface, Whores for Gloria is one desperate, delusional man, so eager for even the illusion of relatedness that he attempts to recreate Gloria with bits and pieces of other prostitutes. It isn't fully clear if Gloria herself was ever real, but regardless, it is now a quest to fill that void collage style with physical samples, such as hair clippings, as well as emotional artifacts. The most poignant scene may be the protagonist hiring a prostitute, and wanting nothing more than to hear happy childhood memories. The prostitute complies as best she can but, story after story, the narratives veer into disturbing material.

The hardest thing for the human to do is to hold opposite opinions about one thing at the same time. The more intelligent and observant one is, the more painfully aware of the absurdity of this task, the more painfully aware of the mental contortions necessary to maintain the illusion of meaning. This is where the magic lies in true artistc genius, such as a Thelonius Monk solo or, in this case, Vollman's writing. I've never read anything that better communicates simultaneous beauty and ugliness. And no better forum than gutter sex, which Vollman renders both repulsive and compelling. And he doesn't do it by being overly clever. He does it through the chaos of brute honesty. Whatever compositional gymnastics go into the writing, the end product is very readable and deceptively simple.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gritty and Compelling, October 11, 2004
This review is from: Whores for Gloria: A Novel (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
I've read that Vollman is the next great American novelist and you can certainly compare him to Pynchon. I wouldn't go quite so far as that, but he certainly has an evocative, if sometimes difficult to follow prose style, that one will either find very annoying or very gratifying, depending how well you get into his groove.

This novel or novella is quite good. Vollman depicts a very gritty, grimy, and sometimes gross Tenderloin district in San Francisco known for it's prostitutes, strip clubs, and other nefarious goings on. The story is about Jimmy, a low life, down and out, alcoholic who is in love with a prostitute named Gloria. The catch is Jimmy is so addled by the end of the novel we never really know whether Gloria is real or a figment of Jimmy's imagination. In some ways Gloria is an amalgamation of a number of street girls that Jimmy congregates with. Whatever the case, the story is compelling - the way watching a train wreck is compelling.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Messes with your mind, in a good way, September 29, 2005
This review is from: Whores for Gloria (Hardcover)
William T. Vollmann, Whores for Gloria (Pantheon, 1991)

Published just as Vollmann was beginning to make a name for himself as a critical darling, Whores for Gloria propelled him into the world of underground literature with a fervor rarely seen. What separates the now-towering Vollmann from his flash-in-the-pan contemporaries is that Vollmann's shock-value work actually has some real meat to it.

Whores for Gloria is the story of Jimmy, a drunkard who lives in San Francisco's Tenderloin district and pines for Gloria. We have no idea who Gloria really is, and we often get the idea that Jimmy doesn't, either. In an effort to rebuild his memories of Gloria in his mind, Jimmy begins paying the area's hookers to tell him stories of their childhoods, which Jimmy then maps onto himself and Gloria, attempting to make her (or his vision of her) achieve flesh-and-blood status.

As the title is likely to convey, Whores for Gloria is not a suitable-for-all-audiences kind of book. However, one isn't going to get the prurient-interest-for-the-sake-of-prurient-interest writing one finds in such authors as Dennis Cooper or Matthew Stokoe; what Vollmann has penned here is a surprisingly subtle mystery novel disguised as a slice-of-life drama so embraced by the other authors mentioned above. The best comparison I can make to this book is to the better novels of Joyce Carol Oates; it seems to me that those who enjoy Oates' take on the disintegration of the psyche will also get a kick out of Vollmann. This one deserves the hype. *** ½
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4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and even informative, April 1, 2011
By 
Dallas Fawson (Salt Lake City, Utah) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Whores for Gloria: A Novel (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
Whores for Gloria, like its author, takes time to grow on you. Vollman's writing style takes some getting used to, but once you read for a little while, you'll realize just how tight his prose is. His exploration of Jimmy's consciousness is haunting, and the way he rehashes the prostitute's stories and changes them to be about himself is interesting.

Another things that is interesting about this book is the ambiguity of Gloria's identity. Gloria is a woman, seemingly a prostitute that Jimmy claims to be married to. He thinks that by collecting stories and hair from other prostitutes he can somehow reconstruct her. The question is whether or not Gloria exists. I came to my own conclusions on that, and I'll let you do the same.

I liked that, at the end of the novella, Vollman included an actual account of his experiences with prostitutes, including a diagram of the average street prices for anything you could think of, as of the early 90's.

My only complaint about the book is that I wish it had gone more into Jimmy's consciousness. Despite that, it is a good way to introduce yourself to the author, simply because of how short it is.

This book is written in a way that reminds me A LOT of Zombie by Joyce Carol Oates, which explores the mind of a psychotic serial killer. I recommend reading that if you like this book, or the other way around.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Tiny greatness., May 10, 2004
This review is from: Whores for Gloria: A Novel (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
One of the editorial reviews calls this a "minor" work and I can see his point; it's a novella with small ambitions and it's defintely tawdry. (For me, that's a plus, having a weakness for that sort of thing.) However, that's not the reason I've read it dozens of times, and will continue rereading it. There's the description of the Tenderloin, which is lean and evocative; Vollman brings it to life the way Jimmy wants the whores' stories to revive Gloria. There's the compassion I have for Jimmy, who is the sort of stinking, addled drunk you'd walk by while holding your breath. But most of all - and I have no idea if it was intended - "Whores for Gloria" becomes this wonderful allegory for the process of writing a novel, if not being a novelist. Jimmy is so deluded that he goes to whores in search of their hair and their stories and their memories, all of which he thinks he can graft on to his memory (invented or not) of Gloria and make her real. It's the same game a novelist plays: there's an ideal vision that exists for reasons only he/she understands. To make it real on paper they have to become an obsessive collector of the world, stealing others' stories and blending them with their own imaginations. Such a strange, crazy-making hobby - and yet every novelist on Amazon.com has indulged in it, which is one more reason that Jimmy becomes a worthy subject. A terrific read(...)
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4 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A well-crafted walk on the wild side, July 10, 1996
By A Customer
This review is from: Whores for Gloria: A Novel (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
Jimmy spends his social security checks on booze and prostitutes, whose stories become more important than their favors. Minimal, nervous and often funny. What the reader actually see of Jimmy 's life is like a wrinkled piece of saran wrap, stretched over a bowl of something slimey, churning,and threatening to overflow; as, almost against your will, Vollmann's elegant spellbinding prose pulls you closer and closer. Beware --this isn't for everyone. It's impolite, gross, nasty, violent. But author Vollmann,who often writes about prostitutes, is himself a little like the stereotypical "whore with the heart of gold." In his very refusal to turn away from ugliness, he reveals a rare beauty.
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Whores for Gloria: A Novel (Contemporary American Fiction)
Whores for Gloria: A Novel (Contemporary American Fiction) by William T. Vollmann (Paperback - February 1, 1994)
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