David Schwinghammer's Blog - Posts Tagged "robert-goolrick"
HEADING OUT TO WONDERFUL
Certain elements of Goolrick's HEADING OUT TO WONDERFUL reminded me of NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN. He catches you completely by surprise. His main character does something so out of character you can't stop thinking about what happened.
Readers can also trace the plot to old time Appalachian music, some of which Goolrich includes in the book. Oldtimers will be reminded of the Kingston Trio's "Hang Down Your Head Tom Dooley."
The story is set in 1948, and Charlie Beale, a war veteran, comes to Brownsburg, Virginia, sizing the place up. Seems like he's "looking for wonderful." He spends most his time outside town near a river just thinking, then he buys the land. He also takes a job as a butcher working for Will and Alma Haislett, and becomes attached to their five-year-old son Sam, who calls him "Beebo."
Sometime during the first several weeks the town's richest man, Boaty Glass, enters the store. He's also the area's biggest landowner. He and Will have known each other since they were kids, but Will tells Charlie Boaty is not a nice man. Later his wife, Sylvan, thirty years his junior, enters the store, looks around and leaves. Charlie looks at her like Frank Sinatra must've looked at Ava Gardner the first time he saw her in the flesh.
Charlie becomes a town hero when he saves Sam from drowning as does Sylvan who was the first to jump in and follow the current. Some back story is necessary. Boatie Glass was a 48-year-old virgin when he went out to Sylvan's little secluded valley and offered her family two thousand dollars for their daughter. They could stay on the land, but if she ever left him he would repossess the place. Her parents were so poor they agreed. We now have a moral dilemma. Is this a legal marriage? She doesn't seem to think so. Sylan, although beautiful, is also an odd duck. Her whole existence is built around fantasy, mainly the movies and her favorite radio program, Helen Trent.
Okay, so Charlie and Sylvan have an affair. But Goolrick throws in a little bit of a quandary. For some reason Charlie takes Sam along. Anybody with a grain of sense would know that eventually the kid would get curious, and sure enough, he does. Charlie Beale is a decent, loveable man. He treats just about everybody with respect. He even tries to join the black church, because they seem to be having fun, while the Baptists and the Methodists just talk about what sinners we all are.
Eventually Boatie finds out about the affair, but it seems he's more upset about Charlie's popularity than the fact that the man is cuckolding him. He doesn't even like her that much. He's got a mistress on the side. But property is property, and he forces Sylan to do something she doesn't want to do or he'll take back her parents' farm.
It appears Sylvan is more loyal to her family, who has pretty much disowned her, than she is to Charlie. That's one theory anyway for the terrible thing that happens. But I kind of think you'll have your own. Some people will be angry that Goolrick doesn't explain it, but it's a better story this way. Another minor quibble is that Boatie Glass, the most despicable character in the book, doesn't get his comeuppance. We want to see him boiled in oil, skinned alive and drawn and quartered, but for all we know he died in bed at age 95 in his sleep.
Readers can also trace the plot to old time Appalachian music, some of which Goolrich includes in the book. Oldtimers will be reminded of the Kingston Trio's "Hang Down Your Head Tom Dooley."
The story is set in 1948, and Charlie Beale, a war veteran, comes to Brownsburg, Virginia, sizing the place up. Seems like he's "looking for wonderful." He spends most his time outside town near a river just thinking, then he buys the land. He also takes a job as a butcher working for Will and Alma Haislett, and becomes attached to their five-year-old son Sam, who calls him "Beebo."
Sometime during the first several weeks the town's richest man, Boaty Glass, enters the store. He's also the area's biggest landowner. He and Will have known each other since they were kids, but Will tells Charlie Boaty is not a nice man. Later his wife, Sylvan, thirty years his junior, enters the store, looks around and leaves. Charlie looks at her like Frank Sinatra must've looked at Ava Gardner the first time he saw her in the flesh.
Charlie becomes a town hero when he saves Sam from drowning as does Sylvan who was the first to jump in and follow the current. Some back story is necessary. Boatie Glass was a 48-year-old virgin when he went out to Sylvan's little secluded valley and offered her family two thousand dollars for their daughter. They could stay on the land, but if she ever left him he would repossess the place. Her parents were so poor they agreed. We now have a moral dilemma. Is this a legal marriage? She doesn't seem to think so. Sylan, although beautiful, is also an odd duck. Her whole existence is built around fantasy, mainly the movies and her favorite radio program, Helen Trent.
Okay, so Charlie and Sylvan have an affair. But Goolrick throws in a little bit of a quandary. For some reason Charlie takes Sam along. Anybody with a grain of sense would know that eventually the kid would get curious, and sure enough, he does. Charlie Beale is a decent, loveable man. He treats just about everybody with respect. He even tries to join the black church, because they seem to be having fun, while the Baptists and the Methodists just talk about what sinners we all are.
Eventually Boatie finds out about the affair, but it seems he's more upset about Charlie's popularity than the fact that the man is cuckolding him. He doesn't even like her that much. He's got a mistress on the side. But property is property, and he forces Sylan to do something she doesn't want to do or he'll take back her parents' farm.
It appears Sylvan is more loyal to her family, who has pretty much disowned her, than she is to Charlie. That's one theory anyway for the terrible thing that happens. But I kind of think you'll have your own. Some people will be angry that Goolrick doesn't explain it, but it's a better story this way. Another minor quibble is that Boatie Glass, the most despicable character in the book, doesn't get his comeuppance. We want to see him boiled in oil, skinned alive and drawn and quartered, but for all we know he died in bed at age 95 in his sleep.
Published on January 17, 2014 10:48
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Tags:
appalachian-music, best-books-of-2012, dave-schwinghammer, fiction, good-read, literature, robert-goolrick, virginia
The Fall of Princes
I have read Robert Goolrick's two previous novels, HEADING OUT TO WONDERFUL and A RELIABLE WIFE. If I had still been doing a top twenty List Mania for Amazon, I would have put both of them on the list for the year they were published.
Alhough not as readable as the previous two, THE FALL OF PRINCES is more significant in that it addresses an ongoing controversy: how rich do you have to be before enough is enough? Rooney, the major character in the novel, works as a Wall Street trader. At one point he does well enough to earn a “yard and a half” bonus at the end of the year. A yard is a million dollars. But, alas, the partying got to him and he was fired, ending up working as a manager for Barnes and Noble.
Rooney never wanted to be a Wall Street wheeler dealer. He had a fellowship to work on his art in Europe for two years. He thought his work was crap and took his father's advise and went to business school. But business school didn't get him his job; the Firm he went to work for didn't take investments under ten million dollars. He got his job because he beat his boss at a poker hand. You'll have to read the book to find out how he did that.
There's also lots of sex involved in the book; Rooney wasn't very selective at the height of the AIDS epidemic; he was bi-sexual, although he does not mention any of his male partners. He was also married to one of the richest women in high society. She ditched him when he got fired, but he claims he'll always love her. We meet her again, but she doesn't seem all that lovable to me.
Rooney really isn't such a bad guy. He forms a relationship with a transexual prostitute named Holly, and they become platonic friends. She works on the street when it's kind of cold out, and he let's her warm up in his apartment once or twice a week. She even cleans his ratty apartment without being asked. Ultimately she tells him she's fallen in love. Again. She ruined her first relationship when her lover gave her money to have the operation, and she spent it on a couple of sailors she met on the way. Who has she fallen in love with? It's Rooney, and he considers it the highest compliment he's ever received. And when he gets down, he knows that somebody loves him. Inexplicably she disappears right after she tells him.
The ending is rather confusing. Rooney insists on buying good sheets, the one rich person habit he refuses to give up; at one point he says only one part of his bed gets mussed. So then he's asexual, right? But when he meets his ex-wife, Carmela, at the book store, he tells her he's a homosexual, but he's not any good at it. He was much better with women. So, is he or isn't he?
I've read an uncomplimentary review about this book, but I get the impression that the author has some experience in this milieu, if his acknowledgments mean anything. So we get to learn something about Wall Street that confirms the old saw: money won't make you happy.
Alhough not as readable as the previous two, THE FALL OF PRINCES is more significant in that it addresses an ongoing controversy: how rich do you have to be before enough is enough? Rooney, the major character in the novel, works as a Wall Street trader. At one point he does well enough to earn a “yard and a half” bonus at the end of the year. A yard is a million dollars. But, alas, the partying got to him and he was fired, ending up working as a manager for Barnes and Noble.
Rooney never wanted to be a Wall Street wheeler dealer. He had a fellowship to work on his art in Europe for two years. He thought his work was crap and took his father's advise and went to business school. But business school didn't get him his job; the Firm he went to work for didn't take investments under ten million dollars. He got his job because he beat his boss at a poker hand. You'll have to read the book to find out how he did that.
There's also lots of sex involved in the book; Rooney wasn't very selective at the height of the AIDS epidemic; he was bi-sexual, although he does not mention any of his male partners. He was also married to one of the richest women in high society. She ditched him when he got fired, but he claims he'll always love her. We meet her again, but she doesn't seem all that lovable to me.
Rooney really isn't such a bad guy. He forms a relationship with a transexual prostitute named Holly, and they become platonic friends. She works on the street when it's kind of cold out, and he let's her warm up in his apartment once or twice a week. She even cleans his ratty apartment without being asked. Ultimately she tells him she's fallen in love. Again. She ruined her first relationship when her lover gave her money to have the operation, and she spent it on a couple of sailors she met on the way. Who has she fallen in love with? It's Rooney, and he considers it the highest compliment he's ever received. And when he gets down, he knows that somebody loves him. Inexplicably she disappears right after she tells him.
The ending is rather confusing. Rooney insists on buying good sheets, the one rich person habit he refuses to give up; at one point he says only one part of his bed gets mussed. So then he's asexual, right? But when he meets his ex-wife, Carmela, at the book store, he tells her he's a homosexual, but he's not any good at it. He was much better with women. So, is he or isn't he?
I've read an uncomplimentary review about this book, but I get the impression that the author has some experience in this milieu, if his acknowledgments mean anything. So we get to learn something about Wall Street that confirms the old saw: money won't make you happy.
Published on October 08, 2015 09:53
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Tags:
aids, free-sex, literary, literary-fiction, money, robert-goolrick, self-destructive, thought-provoking, wall-street