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Swinburn is impressed by Heyward's social ease with beautiful women, and he makes a pact with him. In exchange for lessons on how to successfully score with women, he will let Heyward stay in a bungalow on his estate and encourage him as a screenwriter.
The only rule: He must keep his hands off Teal, the beautiful woman who also lives on his estate and who, of course, is the only women Heyward really wants.
Like Peter Farrelly's THE COMEDY WRITER, Michael Tolkin's THE PLAYER, and Peter Lefcourt's THE DEAL, WORD is a worthy new member of the growing genre of Hollywood novels in which idealistic would-be screenwriters and filmmakers experience disillusionment as they come up against the madly illogical Hollywood system, in which liars, con artists and charlatans occupy almost all of the positions of power. -- R. Hunter Garcia, USA Today, January 7, 1999
Masterfully bitter story in the Bruce Wagner/Michael Tolkin mode with a screenwriter hero who sneers at de rigeur Hollywood happy endings but is provided with one by his author (THE SHALLOW MAN, 1995).
Language is all this novel downloads - a torrent of L.A. buzzwords and insider cynicism unmatched since Odets and Lehman's SWEET SMELLS OF SUCCESS took on Manhattan's nightlife. As with Tony Curtis's seedy Sidney Falco, Felske pumps Heywood Hounestein so full of film babble he's ready to burst. To insecure but WASPish Heywood, who's written scripts on spec, with not one green-lighted, and who must tar everyone around him with is own shrunken sense of self, and leading man is dismissed as "Starman," struggling actors as "Strugs," and pretty faces with few goals as "8x10s." When Heywood - accompanied by his beautiful but alcoholic arm piece, Baby Garbo - meets mega-mogul Sydney Swinburn, he sees a way of perhaps getting his masterpiece, the script of his Age of Astonishment, sold at last. A wonderfully literate script, Sydney says, but, sadly, uncommercial, and he is in the business to make money. Still, he sees in Heywood a bookish ladies' man who can bring into this boorish super-producer's life just what he needs to fill a void: intimacy with the type of woman he has always challenged himself to attain. They strike a Faustian bargain to help each other as Sydney attends Heywood's charm school. Heywood, however, must not pursue Sydney's sought-after and mysterious Teal. When Heywood and Teal find each other irresistible, Sydney, the fearsome dark lord, assures Heywood's destruction in Hollywood.
Well, it's not Marlowe or Goethe, and cynics may snap their fangs at that big-bucks ending, but for film lovers the Hell-A hypechat will flick all of your fuses. -- Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1998
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Witty, engaging, clever,
By A Customer
This review is from: Word (Hardcover)
This book had me laughing out loud every few pages. It was a fun read -- I was looking forward to each next chapter. You can feel Howard's dripping insecurity, the rut his life is in, the corner he's painted for himself. The characters are all vivid and believable, with the exception of Sidney perhaps. This is not a heavy or deep book -- just a ton of fun and really clever.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Highly Recommend,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Word (Mass Market Paperback)
First of all, I think it is very funny that everyone gave this book a great review except the two readers from Los Angeles, where this book is set! Maybe it hits too close to home for Angelenos who (I have found) overestimate their cultural and intellectual significance. As well as being completely full of themselves.I read this book long before I came out to Los Angeles, and would like to read it again now that I have been here a few years. Back in a rural area of the East Coast, I thought it was a hilarious book that I could not put down. It is one of those books you are disappointed to have end. Sadly, some (a lot) of the book is true of the Hollywood scene. Ok, so it's not some grand philosophical treatise, but it is a very witty and sharp view of Hollywood. I have read other Felske books, and they do not compare to clever writing of this book.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Complete God Send to All,
By Jeet (U.K) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Word (Mass Market Paperback)
Wow! This novel blew me away. This is the 1st piece of Felske's work I have had the luck and pleasure to come across and without being too OTT I salute this man, he is just one of those writers whose work you rarely come across, you know, it's engaging, witty, intelligent without being promiscious, hip and so swallowing. The only other author who has caused such a reaction from me is Arthur Golden and his brilliant Memoirs of a Geisha. Read Word and don't look back.
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