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Secret Squirrel's avatar

Good review! I just finished the book myself and I'm struck that you think Xavier is negatively portrayed. He's the only character who knows what he wants and who is able to be genuinely creative, in part no doubt because he's older than the millennials.

The main couple has potential but they suffer from a failure of desire that I think is supposed to be typical of their generation. Xavier knew what Mariko wanted and was pretty delicate about it, first having a relationship with her and then, moving on and drawing what the book assures us is a clear line, giving Mariko the most fulfilling roles of her career in small productions of Shakespeare and Chekov. In contrast, Dan doesn't know or at least won't acknowledge or act on either what Mariko wants (a family) or what Eliza wants (sex / the more impressive version of himself he presents in his lectures). This is partly because Dan the potentially interesting leftist intellectual who wrote about Henry James through the lens of Lukács has been diminished on every level by the internet, becoming a generic leftist blogger and a mediocre boyfriend. He sees his early potential reflected in Eliza, the student who is charmed by his lectures, but he can't even convincingly impersonate the man she wants him to be. Xavier, for his part, appreciates Mariko for exactly who she is. But Xavier is dying, and neither Dan nor Mariko can be creative in the way Xavier (and by implication his formed-before-the-internet generation) was.

(Gasda is a friendly acquaintance fwiw, discount as needed.)

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David A. Westbrook's avatar

Knowing yet gracious. And, fwiw, I agree. Well done!

I think you are right about the play quality, unsurprising given that Gasda is a playwright. I too noticed the long dialog stretches, and was a touch frustrated, but if you zoom out (as you suggest) they make sense. Gasda's conversations that go on too long, that cannot be left, trap the reader. Not exactly fun, but rather devastatingly effective. And I found myself losing patience with the whole scene, the whole generation?, the bullet . . .

Anyway, good book, and good review.

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