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Through the use of her camera's frame and lens Lipper evokes/creates/invents realities that force unanswered questions and pose mystery. Frederick Barthelme's fiction hauntingly echoes the quality of dislocation permeated in the photographs. Together the text and photographs create an ambitious concept of contemporary existence.
"Trip" is a beautiful, smart, funny and disturbing book.
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In many of these stories, the sexual frustration between characters is leaping off the page; just when you think something will break, it gets even more intense. Most of the stories involve a male and female as the main chars.
A handful of stories are written in 2nd person, which is extremely difficult to pull off. FB does an okay job of it, but doesn't convince me.
I enjoyed the collection and will definitely consider other works by him.
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When you're a writer, and your brother is a writer, you have to expect the comparisons, especially if the two of you tend to float in the same water. The particular swimming pool that is eighties literature, [urinated] in on a fairly regular basis by Papa Hemingway and Sinclair Lewis, is home to the Barthelme brothers. And as much as I hate to draw obvious comparisons and judge by them, Donald's the better writer.
Still, Fred is capable of turning a decent tale. His protagonist is on the cusp of divorce, staying in Florida with his soon-to-be-ex-wife's sister. The two never quite get romantically entangled, but they share bed space every once in a while, which makes things slightly uncomfortable when the wife shows up.
Frederick Barthelme's strength resides in his ability to create minor characters and setting; much of what goes on around the main triangle here is memorable, in ways (as much as I hate to do it again... it's the same kind of semi-dada whimsy that inhabits Donald's more notable works). The problem is that the main plot, what little there is of it, never really gets off the ground. The main characters don't have the emotional depth to hold the minimal changes in their emotional states that Frederick is trying to use to signal the way their relationships are changing towards one another. He's also guilty of giving just enough in places to be ambiguous about what events will transpire, then cutting to the next morning without us knowing exactly what went on, and then never following up.
Could've been good. Left a lot to be desired. **
There are arresting images and colorful dialoge in parts of this book, but nothing binds it all together into any kind of emotional or intellectual whole. The scenes that worked best would probably make a good minimalist play. Something like Pinter with a bit of wry humor. But as a novel, this book is just too thin in every regard and one reaches the end knowing nothing more about the central characters than when the book began. It is a promise unfulfilled.
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This could be handled as a modern relationship comedy, and it would be awful. But though there are lots of funny moments, and though the characters sometimes seem like they'd feel at home in a sitcom, Barthelme is a better writer than that. Instead, the characters appear to be acting the part of a relationship comedy that they've somehow walked into. At the same time there is an overwhelming sense of discomfort and a feeling that this relationship comedy may be messier than they are prepared for, and they know it.
Edward is confronted by the I suppose ever-present threat of what love may potentially require of a person, as well as the possibility that he may not be able to meet those requirements. He is confronted with his own sexual problems (never entirely specified), as well as Elise's sexual exploits with other men. He is forced to face the possibility that he may just hate women. And he has to argue his case in front of a whole cast of characters.
The novel is ambitious, and reading it I felt the weight of so many "crises of modernity" squeezing as much as could be had from the prose. Fans of Douglas Coupland (I am not one) will go mad for this. "Two Against One" covers a lot of Coupland-overused territory, addressing suburban life, consumerist living, the sexual revolution, gender politics, and morality (particularly different people's incompatible moral codes). Ultimately the book deals with the pursuit of happiness in the modern world. And yes, before you ask, I do feel that the scope and ambition of "Two Against One" detract from our intimacy with the characters, the story, and the author, and I do feel that a sense of realism is expunged in favor of functionality to a subtext far larger than the mere text. And yes, I do feel this is a problem. I came to this book after something like seven readings of "Moon Deluxe," which has the aforementioned intimacies and realism in spades. "Moon Deluxe" allows the reader to consider and judge such big issues on their own when faced with what seem like fairly unremarkable situations and realistic characters who appear, I dunno, effected by their settings, but not artifacts of it. "Two Against One" never approached heavy-handedness, but by overtly raising big issues (sometimes this is done literally in the dialogue, sometimes it is simply inevitable given the situations), even if not confronting them, it is difficult to read the characters or situations outside the context of these big issues. Maybe this is the novel's greatest strength, but unfortunately it prevents the characters from ringing true, turns the specific global, and comes off as calculated.