I read the book anyway and provided a nice relief from the more serious stuff I've been reading. Mooch is pulp fiction: entertaining, fast-paced, appalling. It tells the story of Bruno Dante, son of novelist Jonathan Dante. Bruno has seen hard times and now is struggling to stay sober. He manages to get a high-paying telemarketing job which he screws up because he falls (absolutely implausibly) in love with a co-worker who speaks in a cartoonish accent and gets him into trouble. If Bruno hadn't been a struggling writer, I probably would have quit reading, but I was hooked on page 37:
"I came to an immediate decision: fuck my writing career. My head was clear for the first time in years. I could foresee my own future. Novelists and screenwriters like Jonathan Dante died broke in L.A., humiliated, compromised. Their balls and their talent sacrificed to a ridiculous Hollywood success fantasy. No one cared about words anymore. Literature was deader than a Seinfeld rerun."God, I hope not. Eventually, though, Dante sends off his story to seven (glad to see he believes in sim-subbing) "high-end men's magazines." So I kept reading to see what would happen.
All in all, it could have been worse.
3 comments:
LOL...I do things like this all the time. Glad to see I'm not the only one.
Right now I'm trying to get into a John Irving novel "Until I Find You" and every page is a chore up until about pg. 19. I will perservere, but it's a library book so I loathe the pressure. It's also over 800 pages long. Just shoot me.
I just don't have patience for the really long ones anymore--but the Irving is on my list (and my shelf). Maybe if someone held a gun to my head . . .
Thank you for all your work and dedication to the field of virtual book fair, Very good write-up. I absolutely appreciate this site.
Post a Comment