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bookworm |
Latest page update: made by bookworm
, Jul 31 2006, 3:31 PM EDT
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Keyword tags:
Books
boys
coming of age
fiction
novels
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| Started By | Thread Subject | Replies | Last Post | ||
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| smplatt | Boys Coming of Age IV | 0 | Sep 9 2006, 1:55 PM EDT by smplatt | ||
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Thread started: Sep 9 2006, 1:55 PM EDT
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Oh Boy! How could I forget to include Damian by Herman Hesse! I had a therapist recommend this one when I was a young man, dealing with an overbearing, unreasonable boss and parents. I'll never forget it, cause it opened my eyes. It's about a young man who is "different", at first he tries to turn to society, religion, etc, and then to crime. After he meets Damian, a youth that is also different, he begins to realize that he has free will and the ability to think on his own, and begins his transformation into a man. Plenty of psychology in this one.
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| smplatt | Boys Coming of Age III | 0 | Sep 8 2006, 7:31 PM EDT by smplatt | ||
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Thread started: Sep 8 2006, 7:31 PM EDT
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Bret Easton Ellis, I both love and hate his bloody stuff, but "Less than Zero" is a great example of his toned down writing. It's about rich and disenchanted college kids home for the holidays in 1980's L.A. Mostly a dark novel about snorting cocaine, male prostitution, and a dead body, we see in it a sharp contrast between the glittering and the gutter, and somehow we find that they are pretty related in more ways than one. In every novel Ellis has to have his token disgusting scene that makes you want to vomit, so prepare yourself. But despite this, the novel is very rewarding in that it makes you think about evil in a different light, and makes you realize that innocence and youth do not necessarily go hand in hand. Overall it is a very moral tale. If you are into this kind of writing see his book "The Rules of Attraction".
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| smplatt | Boys Coming of Age II | 0 | Sep 8 2006, 7:01 PM EDT by smplatt | ||
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Thread started: Sep 8 2006, 7:01 PM EDT
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I just read "Boy in the Air" by Don Bajema, and it gritty portrayal of the baby boomers growing up in the turbulent 60's. Mr. Bajema writes about what America really is to many kids: Foreign wars, trailer life, dusty highways, dirty ashtrays, beer bottles, lurid neon, and other trash. I appreciate his detail, his honesty, and each broken dream of the main character, Eddie, as he becomes a screwed up man. Another title you should check out is "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" by James Joyce. If you can wade through Joyce's wordy vernacular you will find a rewarding story about a young man coming to terms with lust and religion on his road to manhood. Sinister Street by Compton Mackenzie is a similar, running rampant with every thought and emotion, but minus the religion factor. (It influenced "This Side of Paradise") Winesburg Ohio by Sherwood Anderson is classic young man versus small town. If you've ever had the opportunity to be trapped in a small town you'll find that Anderson's characters transcend time and place, and you'll appreciate this one. It reminded me of the play "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder, another study of youth and the passing of time, that I found quite depressing.
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