From the tough street kid whose teeth are knocked out when trying to defend his heritage, to the adolescent's first amorous gropings, and on to the "adult work" of full-blown sexual powers, we are taken by Mr. Kessler on a roller-coaster ride of emotions and intellect colliding, imploding and perhaps (for the reader) reconciling. By turns it is a novel bawdy, sensual, comedic, lonely, poetic, philosophical, but always touchingly poignant. It is as if Ted swims and simmers in a testosterone-boosted cauldron from which there is neither escape nor hope of answers - only questions and drives - and the strange meeting each day (and all his nights) with anguished fears and surprising joys brought by friends, family, lovers.
RAPID TRANSIT: 1948, An Unsentimental Education is not a philosophical essay variously expressed as a novel, but rather a challenging story of the everyday, told with vitality, through a search for poetry, and the interconnections of people struggling to fulfill themselves. After all, Ted's cerebral musings occur as our hero is desperately trying to get laid, get a job, and find a life. It is couched in a real Bronx neighborhood replete with delis, parks, bakeries and with specific odors of moldering apartments, lusty youths, and the new Bop sounds of Bud Powell and Max Roach at Manhattan's jazz clubs.
RAPID TRANSIT is peopled with some of the most idiosyncratic characters I have met in modern fiction. Besides Ted and his alter-ego, Leon, their buddies and lovers, there's a Runyanesque assortment of personalities: an ancient kosher slaughterer who spends his lonely days killing flies on a window sill with a slash of his ritual knife, Leon's dying father suffering in morphine-blurred agony, and Hanuschka, an Auschwitz survivor, who after experiencing truly absurd horror, is now beyond philosophy and seeks only an American normalcy.
The closing chapters, explosively hallucinatory, are as brilliantly written an exploration of Existential angst as any I have read, reminiscent of, who else but? Joyce's own Stephen Dedalus. Ted descends into his own Hades in a drug-induced state, and we follow him reluctantly into the surreal, fractured, and murderous night world where he almost loses himself. However, unlike the positive affirmation of life that is ULYSSES' mature denouement, RAPID TRANSIT leaves the reader with a sense of loneliness and tragic solitude in the deathly, impersonal universe that opened to our consciousness indelibly after 1945.
RAPID TRANSIT is probing serious fiction that both challenges as it delights. Mr. Kessler, an accomplished and noted poet and writer, clearly is a lover of our urban language. Though he pays homage by allusion to the like of Joyce and Eliot, he is clearly the master of his own luscious, incandescent prose and poetry. This author has created a genuine, if unusual masterpiece that deserves to be read for its skeptically contrary and disturbing view of our society 50 years ago, and its wide window on our world today, for its clearly delineated and idiosyncratic characters and setting, and for the sheer enjoyment of reading an author in full command of his language and his art.
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