Odd and Great
The Williams family is odd. Apparently set in the 1950s, the house they live in is described as the “special” house that exists in every neighborhood where the inhabitants are also “special,” or at least different. This one is on Seminary Street in Cleveland, Ohio. This odd family is the subject of this odd book, “All Fall Down” written by James Leo Herlihy, as his first novel.
Told mainly through the eyes of 14-16-year-old Clinton Williams, each member of the odd family is brutally depicted. Clinton obsessively writes down everything in his notebooks and much of the story consists of excerpts from those notebooks. He has dropped out of school and attempts to follow his older brother, Berry-berry, a petty criminal and unsuccessful pimp who is extremely attractive to women. The father, Ralph, describes Berry-berry’s activities as “Sampling life and all its riches.”
Clinton loses his virginity to a prostitute, falls in love with a woman twice his age, contemplates suicide and murder, and keeps his compulsive notebooks. His curiosity overflows and he gathers information about others through eavesdropping, listening through the clothes chute, reading other people’s mail, and going through purses. ”A person’s intimate belongings had always held for him as much fascination as any private conversation or even a personal letter.”
The book has a strong political undertone. Remember, this is the 1950s and there is some commentary on capitalism and communism. The character Berry-berry carries the plot as he has discovered two truths about himself – he doesn’t like to work and women find him irresistible. That is a dangerous combination.