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A Fraction of the Whole (Paperback)

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4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (104 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. At the heart of this sprawling, dizzying debut from a quirky, assured Australian writer are two men: Jasper Dean, a judgmental but forgiving son, and Martin, his brilliant but dysfunctional father. Jasper, in an Australian prison in his early 20s, scribbles out the story of their picaresque adventures, noting cryptically early on that [m]y father's body will never be found. As he tells it, Jasper has been uneasily bonded to his father through thick and thin, which includes Martin's stint managing a squalid strip club during Jasper's adolescence; an Australian outback home literally hidden within impenetrable mazes; Martin's ill-fated scheme to make every Australian a millionaire; and a feverish odyssey through Thailand's menacing jungles. Toltz's exuberant, looping narrative—thick with his characters' outsized longings and with their crazy arguments—sometimes blows past plot entirely, but comic drive and Toltz's far-out imagination carry the epic story, which puts the two (and Martin's own nemesis, his outlaw brother, Terry) on an irreverent roller-coaster ride from obscurity to infamy. Comparisons to Special Topics in Calamity Physics are likely, but this nutty tour de force has a more tender, more worldly spin. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Review

“Comic drive and Steve Toltz’s far-out imagination carry the epic story . . . a nutty tour de force.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

“This hilarious, sneaky smart first novel is as big and rangy as Australia . . . Toltz salts it all with uproarious ruminations on freedom, the soul, love, death, and the meaning of life. This is one rampaging and irresistible debut.” —Booklist, starred review


“A fantastic, rollicking adventure of a novel, both startlingly
original and hysterically funny. Surely this is
the new picaresque, rivaling Ignatius Reilly and Billy Bathgate.”
—David Francis, author of The Great Inland Sea
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 576 pages
  • Publisher: Spiegel & Grau; Reprint edition (September 23, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385521731
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385521734
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.2 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (104 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #16,354 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Steve Toltz
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Customer Reviews

104 Reviews
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 (50)
4 star:
 (29)
3 star:
 (14)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (5)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (104 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
31 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Uncommon Denominators, December 23, 2007
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Writing is about, if anything, ideas. And Steve Toltz has a lot of them. His book, "A Fraction of the Whole," is a sprawling stew of philosophies and ruminations, a grand fictive enterprise teeming with two-sided arguments over everything from the meaning of life to the horror of death. There's no doubting that Toltz's ambitions are lofty, but his prose is loopy and lanky. The end result may be a bit bloated, but it's also dangerously close to being brilliant.

Martin Dean, a moderately deranged father, and Jasper, his emotionally stunted son, form the core of the novel. Although their individual and combined stories concern things like espionage, mental hospitals, murder sprees, comas, first loves, and the burning down of an entire town, most of the story actually takes place in the plotless morass of these guys' heads. Both Martin and Jasper shudder when they are labeled philosophers, but they seem unable to do much more than let life wash over them while they try vainly to sift purpose and justification out of the foamy waves.

Toltz may be brimming with interesting bon mots and thought-provoking insights, his story may be almost obsessively concerned with the cold, shuddering stop that comes at the end of life's twisted coil (four separate characters commit suicide), but his writing is agile and clever enough to shrug off the ponderous gloom that normally comes with such a dark and dismal subject matter. Martin and Jasper never miss an opportunity to analyze the weird and warped ways of life and its inevitabilities, but at least they do it without taking themselves too seriously. They are like clowns smirking under painted frowns. And what is a clown, anyway, except a philosopher with flashier clothing?

With a book this boldly open-ended, there are a slew of unanswered questions left by the final page. And Toltz's unrelenting digressions and thought-games -- no matter how wittily phrased -- are sure to turn some people off. This reviewer ate them up (some pages I read over and over, they're that savory). In fact, I suspect that Toltz is on the verge of mastering the kind of multi-layered literature that is missing in most fiction these days. This book has as much import and potency as any of the novels you'll find on a typical list of "classics," but the writing is so unpresumptuous, so effortless and delectable, that the themes aren't alienated by the words. It's a dense thicket, this book, but it isn't inaccessible. Toltz gives you a machete and shows you where to start swinging.

It's too bad many (dare I say most?) readers today prefer their reading to be less about work and more about distraction. Don't get me wrong; Toltz's imagination is a vibrant and entertaining place, but Martin and Jasper are inexhaustible theorists, pessimists with a cause, idealists who love humanity but hate society, relentless dancers who can't stand music. Out of them pours every wild idea it seems that Steve Toltz has, and although many of them are left wild, most of them come together in the book's twisted knot of a heart. It's a frustrating and ingenious mess, as beautiful and contained as a thunderstorm.

It's easy to imagine, reading this tome, that Toltz simply took every idea he ever had for a book and put them all between the same two covers. I certainly hope that's not the case. Toltz's style is irreverent and modest, learned and loony, smart, captivating, provocative and fun. Here's hoping he has a lot more in him waiting to come out.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Virtuosic yet self-indulget, March 23, 2009
By wbjonesjr1 (São Paulo, Brazil) - See all my reviews
This was a really tough book to get through. I only did because I thought the writing was outstanding. Tolz is a literary virtuoso. There are great positives in this book, from the overall originality of the novel; to the very moving and powerful climax; to an extraordinarily original and intricate plot; through Tolz's writing. But there are also aspects that irritate and almost made me give up halfway. These are:

- the characters are impossible to like. This applies to Martin and Jasper Dean, both of whom are just too wierd and eccentric and self-important to care about. The review on the cover page comparing this novel to " A Confederacy of Dunces" does "Confederacy..." a disservice: Ignatius O Reilly is also wierd and eccentric and self important but he was comic and pathetic in a way that the Deans never manage to be. By the way, its not easy to like much any of the secondary characters either...

- some plot twists are hard to handle, eg. Anouk's transformation from hippy into "one of the richest women in Australia";

- while the book had a hugely entertaining first 100 or so pages and equally excellent final 100 pages, the middle was boring at times, irratating at others (where it seems Tolz wants to show he's read every book on philosophy ever written). The one exception here is the part involving bullying and suicides at Jasper's school, which is really really emotionally devastating - enough so to make one persist through the book in search of more of the same power (which does finally happen).

3 stars therefore for exceptional power and excellent writing, versus some (rather lengthy) deeply irritating sections and unsympathetic characters. But I'm very curious to see what Tolz will come up with next
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars All these fractions do make an interesting whole, February 7, 2008
By M. A. Filippelli "Marc12074" (Elk Grove, CA, US) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
An interesting story about Father - son(s) relationships in some very odd situations. It is well written. Toltz describes the situations in complete detail. Some of the situations are ridiculous but make total sense based on the characters personalities, some funny situations and some ridiculously funny situations. It's very easy to immerse yourself in the story. Toltz does a good job of setting up the story starting out with setting up how these characters came to be and their genetic make up according to the stories told by the Father. The story is told in a fairly detailed and descriptive way. I do like the narrative style of this book.

Through these characters you get to travel to many different places. It's quite an adventure. It's a crazy zany story that just could happen. It's fiction in a non fiction way in that the story is well written and the characters are believable

This is an excellent fist novel that reads like a seasoned writer had written it.
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Bottom line is that i liked this book. It was like spending a weekend with a brilliant friend who does a lot of speed.
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I am currently only half way through this book, and I've got to say it has been a great ride so far. The humor is wonderful, and the readability is amazing. Read more
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