Abby's review
The Abstinence Teacher by Tom Perrotta
Well.
I'm rather Tom Perrotta-obsessed. I've been known to babble on about him...over and over and over again.
I was really excited for this book to come out. I loved the concept of Ruth, a Human Sexuality teacher, being called into question for something innocent, a casual remark, and how the hyper-Christian population attacked her like she had horns and had the middle name Lucifer. And the connection between Tim, her daughter's born-again soccer coach, and Ruth are great. The scene where Ruth realizes that Tim is praying on after a particularly invigorating game is so well-done.
But. And there's a but. It's well-written, because, of course, it's Tom Perrotta and he's wonderful. However, this book was so lackluster compared to his other great books (Little Children! The Wishbones! Election!) that is was almost reminiscent of Joe College, the only book of his that I didn't devour in a single sitting. And it was really disappointing.
Maybe I should blame myself. After readin...more
I'm rather Tom Perrotta-obsessed. I've been known to babble on about him...over and over and over again.
I was really excited for this book to come out. I loved the concept of Ruth, a Human Sexuality teacher, being called into question for something innocent, a casual remark, and how the hyper-Christian population attacked her like she had horns and had the middle name Lucifer. And the connection between Tim, her daughter's born-again soccer coach, and Ruth are great. The scene where Ruth realizes that Tim is praying on after a particularly invigorating game is so well-done.
But. And there's a but. It's well-written, because, of course, it's Tom Perrotta and he's wonderful. However, this book was so lackluster compared to his other great books (Little Children! The Wishbones! Election!) that is was almost reminiscent of Joe College, the only book of his that I didn't devour in a single sitting. And it was really disappointing.
Maybe I should blame myself. After readin...more
i pretty much agree with you on all your points. i too like tom perrotta and he's a terrific writer but there was something leaden about this book. i found large parts of tim's story boring. i liked ruth far more but there was very little interaction between the two really. there are two complete character studies here but they don't have much of a reason to overlap. i kept dreading what i knew the ending had to be (i won't repeat it here). it was slightly better than my anticipation but not by much.
paul
I agree that the two stories didn't overlap much -- it is almost like Perrotta had two completely separate characters sketched out, Ruth and Tim, and wondered what would happen if they ever met. So he takes their individual stories and makes one novel out of it, adding in the parts where they interact. My question is, why name the novel "The Abstinence Teacher"?
