From Publishers Weekly
There is rarely even a snicker is this supposedly comic first novel by a monologue writer for David Letterman. And therein lies the problem: stand-up comedy material can sound good when delivered by a professional, while that same material on the page of a novel will appear forced and lifeless. Harvey "College Boy" Sussman is the ringer of the title; he is a 35-year-old goof who gets paid to play softball for a dozen or so teams in and around New York City. As College Boy's athletic prowess diminishes and his fondness for prescription drugs increases, he has no clue what he will do after softball, though he also has a gig as a professional laugher on a call-in radio show. Morton Martin Spell is his uncle, a long-retired magazine writer who, as the story opens, is rushed to the hospital suffering the effects of a long relationship with vodka and Valium. There is something smarmy about the narration of the irrational ramblings of this old man zonked out on drugs (and as if that isn't enough, he is saddled with prostate problems, Parkinson's disease and serious overmedication by incompetent doctors), which take up most of the novel and are decidedly not funny. Scheft also introduces a whore with a heart of gold; a petty gangster, the Dirt King, who controls all dirt movement in Central Park; and a loud, obnoxious radio talk-show host. These New York extras are well conceived, but even they can't keep Scheft's tale from falling flat.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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Review
"A moving story about love between wounded souls that will linger in the mind far longer than the laughs." --
Bruce McCall"Bill Scheft's novel produces the kind of explosive laughs that can create an unsanitary condition." --
Jeffrey Toobin"Has to be the summer's funniest novel....Fast moving fiction at its swiftest." --
Trenton NJ Times"If you don't enjoy this book, there is something wrong with you." --
Dave Letterman"Scheft keeps the material coming at machine-gun pace....the jokes are plentiful and very high in quality." --
New York Times Book ReviewDamn funny, and ultimately moving. Four stars. --
Maxim
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