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by Jonathan Lethem
In a word (or two or three):we used to call the lobby of our 1980s UES apartment the FoS, too, and it rocked!
From Mr. Hipster:
To call this book vaguely racist would
be a stretch, but it does seem that our author writes about being
a white kid growing up in 1970s and 80s Brooklyn in an unflinching
manner that involves daily fears of being robbed and beaten by his
black neighbors. This race divide lasts well into his adulthood, and
scars him to a point of genuine mental anguish. He watches as drugs
and violence destroy his friends, and eventually end up shaping his
life in more ways than he even realizes. Equally as influential on
his life is his hermit father and wayward, hippy mother--the same
people who moved him to this Gowanus / Boerum Hill area. The story
revolves around this guy, Dylan Ebdus, and his struggles with his
identity growing up always sticking out like a sore thumb, always
playing the victim. He did graffiti because his black best friend
did graffiti. He could do it better, but abdicated to his buddy because
he didn't feel he was worthy or right for the job. He became the owner
of great power, but let his friend have the glory for the same reason.
Ultimately it's a book about disappointment and unfulfilled potential.
Of course I'm kind of a dumbass when it comes to interpreting messages.
The nice thing about the book is that it's not just another dreary
tale of family woe and rudderless depression. The thing throws in
some curveballs with some magic--for lack of a better word--and very
New York-centric details. It's a story based in reality--the reality
of a location and a time, but at the same time isn't afraid to take
chances with some fantasy elements. The book gets a tad repetitive
at times (the word "yoke" is used like four hundred times in a span
of about fifty pages), but not enough to dampen the wonderfully nostalgic
feel and great storytelling put out there by Lethem. While conforming
somewhat to the hipster, post-modern writing methodology, Lethem wrote
a novel that will certainly stay with me for quite a while, and certainly
inspire me to go pick up another one of his books.
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