Sometimes you have to entertain negative thoughts about a book and/ or read a book which s not all sunshine and flowers, sort of soldier thru, to find out what the author is saying, what point he's making here, and then to decide if it's worth it and he achieved it. I do think this IS done for a purpose, but so far I can't figure out what?
I don't know what, or who, at this point, it's about, and so I don't know where to focus my allegiances, and that's a strange feeling. Somewhat like being in a car, burdened by the need to do something with the baggage we all have, driving to a destination but uncertain when i get there what I'll do.
If you back off from it a bit and look at it carefully it's ludicrous. The plot is ludicrous. Traude mentioned that he's paying for his mother's care, the good son? He must be trying to be a good son, taking those abusive calls, trying to find (and not succeeding, even with dead ashes) closure. What's going on with him and his father's ashes? Why can't he be straight with her?
Pedln mentions conditions, IF you do this THEN I'll do that, and game playing. I truly think Russo is trying to do something bold here, I don't think this is a sloppy causal book. Is it autobiographical? Is Griffin Every Man in middle age?
Gum mentions "he sarcasm, snobbishness and sheer bitchiness evident in the mother is almost unbelievable." Yes, almost an over the top characterization and so is the ashes in the trunk, that's what makes me think this is intended as good humored if not funny (think of it as a movie, kind of a Little Miss Sunshine or perhaps Chevy Chase in Vacation), beaten down but well meaning son, a symbol for all middle aged sons, has not only the carping mother on the phone he's got the father in the trunk).....is this a grown up Portnoy, tryiing to finally...finally....what? WHAT? That's the issue with me, and Sally caught something I missed: hit it on the head.
Sally!! Good heavens, yes, nearly jumped out of my chair: Why did G feel more resentment for Joy's parents (Harve & Jill) than he did for his own? Was it because it forced him to realize how self-centered and disinterested (in him) his parents really were?
Or could it be something else? That's fabulous, Sally, I missed it entirely, I think I got swept up in his passive aggressive (or do we think that's what it is?) reaction to everything?
Man with a Load of Sorrows, literally. Are we supposd to like him? Identify with him? He's not an ax murderer after all.
Gum mentions the return after a big family gathering, to their regular life. There's a normal life, and then there's the one in the car with mom harping on the phone, demanding a visit (ostensibly to take her library books).
Am I the only one who sees her as wanting attention, respect, AND love?
Griffin has his father's ashes in the car and his mother haunting him on the phone, and he keeps enduring. I cannot figure out what the mother is after: attention? Love? That criticism she does makes me think, perversely, that perhaps she wants to finally be appreciated, by somebody. For her....ah.....high aspirations and education? For what? She wants to finally succeed, I think. They all do.
Traude says she thinks the quest for happiness is a theme, I hope I've paraphrased that correctly. Quest, they're all on a quest, but what for, that's the issue, do they even know? Could this be one of those books where it's evident to the reader but not the players what's going on?
I hope not because I can't figure out for myself, what IS going on.
I think Griffin wants his father to succeed, too. He wants to make it all right, why them first instead of himself?
She still has privileges, you know, in the library, she's writing a book.
As Jane said, they take their own misery with them, Griffin takes his in phone calls and the car trunk. But he could shuck that off.
I can't get a handle on any of them, yet, so I don't know who to focus on, like Gum's family reunion (I'm an only child, so is Griffin, big families are incomprehensible to me). Is it because they're not well written, they are not fully fleshed out or realized, or is it because it's early days yet, or could it be that there's another reason? If so he's a heck of a writer.
I also found my attention wandering when reading, I'm not sure why, it's an easy quick read. Maybe he is pushing some buttons and I have to go off and deal with my own issues first?
I think this is an ambitious book, I hope to find out from your own thoughts, for myself, as a reader, if he achieved that ambition or if, like what appears to be the majority of his characters so far, he does not.