Starred Review. An understated, eloquent novel by Holleran (Dancer from the Dance) captures the pain of a generation of gay men who have survived the AIDS epidemic and reached middle age yearning for fidelity, tenderness and intimacy. The unnamed, silver-haired narrator has just relocated from Florida, where he cared for his recently deceased mother for the last 12 years, to Washington, D.C., to "start life over" and teach a college seminar on literature and AIDS. He rents a room in a townhouse near Dupont Circle, his solitude deepened by his awareness that he and his gay, celibate landlord, a "homosexual emeritus," form only a semblance of a household. The narrator spends his days exploring the streets of the capital and his nights engrossed in the letters of Mary Todd Lincoln, who held onto her grief and guilt at her husband's death much like the narrator hordes his guilt for never having come out of the closet to his mother—and for having survived the 1980s and '90s. Holleran makes his coiled reticence speak volumes on attachment, aging, sex and love in small scenes as compelling as they are heartbreaking. Visiting with his friend Frank, whose willful pragmatism throws the narrator's mourning in sharp relief, prove especially revealing. Frank manages to have a steady boyfriend, while for the narrator, his landlord and most of their friends, love and partnership seem impossibly intimate. Until its terse, piercing conclusion, Holleran's elegiac narrative possesses its power in the unsaid. (June)
In his fifth work of fiction, Andrew Holleran, author of the widely praised Dancer from the Dance (1978), explores the complex issues surrounding grief while offering multifaceted impressions of Washington, D.C. Critics praised Holleran's lyrical writing, his subtle and flavorful characterizations, and the beauty of his observations—especially in his evocations of the city. Several admired Holleran's refusal to deal with grief in simplistic terms. John Freeman carped that the novel was a "talky piece of fiction" in which "dialogue nudges the narrative along." But even he admitted that "the languorous beauty of Holleran's observations gives the book bottom and weight." Most critics agree with Michael Upchurch that "this brief, quiet novel may be [Holleran's] best yet."
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
*Starred Review* A pensive, creative, and haunting novel that speaks expressly to the heart without sentimentality, by the author of Dancer from the Dance (1978), an important novel from the 1970s-'80s gay-lit renaissance. The title of Holleran's new novel states its theme. He offers the story of a middle-aged gay man heading to Washington, D.C., to live and teach for a short term, to get away from his hometown after his mother's death. He takes a room in an elegant townhouse owned by another middle-aged gay man, who is slowly and quietly grieving over the loss of youthful energy, attractiveness, and prowess. While living in Washington and commiserating with his landlord and the friend they have in common over the loss of lives the tsunami of AIDS caused in the '80s, he rather accidentally picks up a volume containing the letters of Mary Todd Lincoln, and he is taken by her grief and sense of displacement after her husband's death and ends up reading every page. His plan, however, especially in coming to Washington, is to start life over again, which Mrs. Lincoln was never able to do--her grief and loneliness became a deep well from which she couldn't escape. Holleran's "message"--that grief is never avoidable for any of us--is so sensitively rendered that it never impedes the swift development of the story line. Brad Hooper
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这本书的叙事节奏简直像一场精心编排的交响乐,每一个音符都恰到好处地敲击在心弦上。作者没有急于抛出宏大的主题,而是选择了一条蜿蜒的小径,带领读者慢慢走进人物的内心世界。我尤其欣赏他对环境描写的细腻,那种光影的变幻、空气中弥漫的气味,都仿佛被施了魔法,真实得让人可以伸手触摸。角色之间的对话火花四射,既有心照不宣的默契,也有暗流涌动的张力,很多时候,他们只是沉默着对视,但那份无声的交流比千言万语更具穿透力。整本书读下来,感觉就像是经历了一场漫长而深刻的洗礼,它没有提供廉价的安慰,而是提供了一种直面复杂人性的勇气。合上书页时,世界似乎因为这些文字而变得更加立体和富有层次感,这是一种非常难得的阅读体验,让人忍不住想要立刻重温那些精彩的章节,去捕捉那些之前可能因为沉浸其中而错过的细微之处。这本书的文字功底毋庸置疑,它在用一种近乎诗意的方式,探讨着存在本身的重量。
评分这本书的语言风格简直像一位老练的爵士乐手在即兴演奏,充满了出人意料的转调和令人拍案叫绝的切分音。它毫不矫揉造作,坦诚得近乎残酷,但在这种坦诚之下,又蕴藏着一种深沉的、近乎哲学的思考。我特别喜欢作者在描写人物内心挣扎时所使用的那些非常规的比喻,它们不是陈词滥调,而是新鲜得仿佛是作者刚刚从自己的灵魂深处提炼出来。比如,他对某种情绪状态的描述,不是简单地说“他感到沮丧”,而是用了一种极其具体的、带有触感的画面来替代,让读者能够“触摸”到那种情绪的质地。这本书的力量在于,它能让你在读到某个句子时,突然间停下来,反复品味,直到你感觉自己与作者的思维产生了共振。这种文字的精准度和冲击力,让我想起那些伟大的文学大师,他们用最少的笔墨,描绘出了最广阔的内心宇宙。这是一本需要细细咀嚼的书,那些味道会在你的味蕾上停留很久。
评分这本书给我的最大感受是关于“真实性”的探讨。它没有试图去描绘一个完美的、理想化的人类情感历程,相反,它将人性的那些阴暗面、矛盾点和自我欺骗暴露得淋漓尽致。我喜欢作者敢于深入挖掘人物性格中那些不讨人喜欢的部分,而不是将其扁平化处理。这些角色是如此的有血有肉,他们的错误和软弱都真实得令人心痛,但同时也因此显得更加可爱和可信。阅读过程中,我时常能看到自己过去的影子,或者听到内心深处那些被压抑的声音,这种共鸣是如此强烈,以至于有时会让人感到有些不适,但正是这种不适,才是成长的契机。这本书的整体基调是沉郁的,但它并非绝望,而是在承认了生活的复杂与苦涩之后,提供了一种更坚韧、更具韧性的生存视角。它教会我,真正的力量往往来自于对自身脆弱性的全然接纳。
评分从文学技法的角度来看,作者对“留白”的运用达到了登峰造极的境界。他非常克制地控制着信息的释放速度,很多关键的情节转折和人物动机的揭示,都是通过环境的侧面烘托或人物的一个微小动作来暗示,而不是直接的心理独白。这种“少即是多”的叙事哲学,让读者有了巨大的解读空间。我常常在阅读过程中停下来,对着一段描述进行长久的沉思,脑海中浮现出好几种可能性,而正是这种悬而未决的状态,维持了整部作品的阅读张力。它不像那些把所有事情都解释得一清二楚的作品,它更像一面镜子,映照出的是读者自身对生命和人性的理解。这本书成功地避开了说教的陷阱,它只是呈现,然后让读者自己去得出结论,这种对读者的尊重,让我对其产生了强烈的敬意。它对情节的编排可谓是环环相扣,但又绝不刻意,一切都显得水到渠成,仿佛本来就该如此。
评分我得说,这本书的结构设计极其大胆,它完全打破了传统小说的线性叙事框架,用一种碎片化、多视角的拼贴方式构建起一个完整的世界观。起初阅读时,我确实有些跟不上作者的思路,感觉自己像一个在迷宫里摸索的探险家,但正是这种不确定性,反而激发了我更强的探索欲。每一个章节的结尾都像一个精心设置的钩子,逼着我不得不翻到下一页,想知道这个片段究竟会导向何方,或者说,它与之前那些看似无关的场景是如何关联起来的。作者在信息管理上展现了大师级的技巧,他懂得何时该给予读者清晰的指引,何时又该让他们在迷雾中自行揣摩。这种阅读过程中的“主动参与感”是我非常看重的,它不再是被动地接收故事,而是积极地参与到故事的构建中去。读完后,我花了很长时间在脑海中整理那些散落的线索,将它们一一对接,最终拼凑出一个令人震撼的整体画面,这种智力上的挑战和最终的成就感,是阅读此书最大的乐趣所在。
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