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Schulman writes passionately about gay and lesbian issues. About the Lower East Side. About AIDS. Schulman cares about her world and it shows in her writing. I enjoy her novels but her essays are where she shines. She's an incredible essayist and an inspiration to me.
Sarah - It's time for another edition of this book. As you wrote, this first book was Volume 1.
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Until roughly twenty minutes before writing this review, I was getting ready to say Empathy was going to be a definite for my best twenty-five reads of 2003 list. Then I read the last three chapters.
The first twenty-seven are brilliant. The story's two main characters are Anna O., a lesbian attempting to get over an old relationship and find someone new, and Doc, a post-Freudian therapist who finds prospective clients by handing out business cards on the street and will never keep a client for more than three sessions. Eventually, their two stories intertwine as Anna, finding one of Doc's business cards, makes an appointment with him. The two of them then proceed to take on relationships of all sorts, Jewish funerals, AIDS, the homeless, and a rainbow of other topics with a wicked wit. Doc obsesses over an old girlfriend as well, and feels an almost supernatural connection with Anna. When one of the main questions in a book is "will Doc end up having a fourth session with Anna?", it's impossible to write a review in a way that makes it sound as important as it actually is, but Anna, Doc, and the supporting cast of characters (Anna's family, Doc's patients and mentor, Anna's old girlfriend's mother, Doc's old girlfriend) are so well-drawn and engaging that it's well-night impossible not to be drawn in to the point where you sit up at night thinking about such things.
Then Schulman hits you with the kicker, the novel's climax, and though it's nothing we haven't seen before (telling you where would be the ultimate plot spoiler, however), it's a sucker punch delivered with such aplomb that it demands a "thank you, ma'am, may I have another." I had figured I knew where the book was going, had it mapped out in my head (and it was a brilliant ending, too), then Schulman flipped all my expectations on their heads and delivered what may have been the only climax that was actually better than what I thought it would be.
Then we get to Chapter Twenty-Seven, and everything goes to hell in a handbasket. We spend two chapters involved in political polemic that has absolutely nothing to do with the rest of the novel, and while they are two brief chapters, their very existence in the book poisons the whole thing. Schulman attempts to wrap things up in the last chapter by going back to the original topic of life-after-Doc Anna, but by then it's too late. The rhythm, the style, the all-around beauty of the book has been dashed against a curb on a dark, rainy street.
My advice? By all means, read this novel. Up to chapter twenty-six. Then skip ahead to chapter thirty. You will still find an ending that is an anticlimax, to say the least, but you will at least be spared pointless political diatribe along the way. ** ½
I tend to devalue words but S.S. reminds me of the power of well-chosen words to strengthen your position in the world. I wonder if that's what people mean when they talk about 'identity'.
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'Shimmer' is not a winner. It's a dud. If one wants to read a 'real good book' about the 50's, the McCarthy era, etc. I recommend 'The Book of Daniel' by E. L. Doctorow. Now that I bought for ... at the Humane Society Thrift Store, another of my haunts.
Initially, I kind of identified with Sylvia. She seemed real, she had a cause. But then that cause developed into a general hatred of men, hatred of the system, just finally hatred; she didn't forgive, at all. N. Tammy was a flake, someone only concerned with appearances and sex. Austin was evil incarnate and played it to the hilt. O'Dwyer a rich blowhard, but at least his heart's in the right place. Cal could have developed into a major force, but he also, is too angry and not given to giving in at any point. Caroline is another flake, sounds good but nothing there: a playgirl.
Had I known the author was an avowed lesbian, I probably would have passed on the book. I didn't even suspect until near the end of the book where Sylvia owns up to it. Had I known, I probably would have thought 'I told you so' whenever the hatred and whining showed through during the course of the story.
I really didn't see the point to the story, it lacks a sense of completeness, and it's written in kind of like a journal format with the years, the hit songs, etc. Perhaps there's a sequel to be done? Who knows. I do know I won't be reading it.
But I still like the cover.
The book reminded me a great deal of "Slaughterhouse Five" in its seemingly disconnected events that later are drawn together into one larger story.
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I am also one of the many people who saw "Rent" on Broadway during the week it won the Tony, and I'm not ashamed to say, I loved it. But a year or so later, when it came to LA, I took a couple of friends and saw it again -- and I have to admit, it seemed fake, packaged, forced. In her role as a critic, apart from her personal connection to the show, Schulman explains why parts of "Rent" seem false. She puts into words some of the fleeting, troubling thoughts I couldn't articulate for myself.
I'm an English professor and I teach drama -- I intend to use "Stagestruck" in future courses.
It doesn't matter whether or not RENT was taken from the pages of "People in Trouble." I think that is beside the point, even for Schulman. She uses her own personal experience to discuss the broader issues that face our society, and the gay movement as a whole.
Looking for "proof" for what Schulman suggests in her text? Proof can be found in our own lives as gay people: from the patriarchal system of gender roles and power that dominate our society, to the pandering for gay votes and gay money. Further proof exists in the writings of such scholars as Gayle Rubin and Urvashi Vaid, among others. Schulman's book should be used as a jumping off point for other things. The book itself is call to re-examine our inner homophobia, our subconscious desire to be "normal," and our ability to be manipulated by the mainstream. If one cannot recognize these things in one's daily life, then one is not looking.
Schulman shares TRUTH and, although that is hard for some to deal with, who's going to do it, if she doesn't.