Fantasy Aficionados discussion

This topic is about
Boy's Life
Monthly Read: Urban Fantasy
>
October 2013-Boy's Life--Roll Call/ Initial thoughts
date
newest »

message 1:
by
carol. , Senor Crabbypants
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Sep 15, 2013 03:36PM

reply
|
flag




"When people get weepy at movies, it's because in that dark theater the golden pool of magic is touched, just briefly. Then they come out into the hard sun of logic and reason again and it dries up, and they're left feeling a little heartsad and not knowing why. When a song stirs a memory, when motes of dust turning in a shaft of light takes your attention from the world, when you listen to a train passing on a track at night in the distance and wonder where it might be going, you step beyond who you are and where you are. For the briefest of instants, you have stepped into the magic realm."


True! This is one that will take me another week to finish - just because it doesn't demand that I turn the page. I'm reading two other books that seem to make me want to finish the next chapter and so Boy's Life never gets my undivided attention...

I think one reason I identified so closely with it from the first was that when I "grew up" (the late '50s and '60s) a bike was a kids primary transportation. I traveled all over 2 counties around our farm till I was 13. Then we moved to Dayton OH and I used it to travel all over there. I identified quite strongly with his/their feelings about bikes and dogs.
Enjoy.




The author wrote many "horror" books and was, for a long time, known as "the poor man's Stephen King" - I think that is why this gets put on the "Horror" shelf.
So far, this book reminds me very much of King's "The Body" novella (made into the film "Stand By Me").


Yes...both evoke the "halcyon days" of youth and, for lack of a better comparison, remind me of sepia tinted photographs- Warm color, just not "living" color.

Yes, I love Bradbury. The October Country and From the Dust Returned are my favorites.

What did you think of the parental relationship? How did all that effect the overall story? Were other relationships catalysts or side issues?
Just throwing out some thoughts.

I asked, because I don't like horror at all. I don't have problems with horrific atmosphere, just with horror actions - e.g. the drowning scene in The Ocean at the End of the Lane nearly let me lem the book.


So far, the biggest complaint I have is that it has no plot. It is a Novel-by-way-of-vignettes. And that is not a necessarily a bad thing- but it makes me think that McCammon is trying to make each scene earnest instead of honest.
For example: The post monster movie sleep-over very early in the book. The sequence of the episode: boys see a monster movie that upsets them because the evil martians "change" people. Moms get concerned and decide to let boys have a sleep over. They watch a meteor fall and the boys think its martians. Ben's dad goes out with friends to find the meteor and Ben tries to stop him, making a scene about his father coming back "changed". His father goes out anyway and comes back "changed" by alcohol.
This whole episode is just so the author can write the following paragraph:
There are things much worse than monster movies. There are horrors that burst the bounds of screen and page, and come home all twisted up and grinning behind the face of somebody you love. At that moment I knew Ben would have gladly looked into that glass bowl at the tentacled Martian head rather than into his father's drunk-red eyes.
It is Earnest. But it is not Honest. Why would I think that? Because, instead of it being an honest narrative of an event and letting the reader form the obvious conclusion from what happens, McCammon has to beat the reader over the head with it a couple of times on subsequent pages:
He (Ben) must have known this was going to happen, I realized. Ben had known when his father went with Donny Blaylock, he would come home changed not by Martians but by th home brew in that flask"
This was not Mr. Sears talking, not really; this was the voice of what the flask flayed raw and bloody inside his soul...
Ben had known...long after midnight, the invader who wore his father's flesh would be in the house."
It is almost as if McCammon purposefully set out to write a book that could be easily dissected by a high-school lit class. I'm at the halfway point and I really have to force myself to read on because the prose is so very heavy-handed.




Even when Boy's Life got "weird" and I wasn't sure if I was following what was happening (view spoiler) ... I think I'm remembering that part right... but even when it was weird, it was still connecting with my mind's eye. I still remember parts of it vividly after hundreds of other books read.
Not only that, but it had me crying like a baby at the end. That simply does not happen with me and books. The ability to evoke real emotion as a writer is a wonderful talent. McCammon had that in this book. My wife loved this book too... and that's another thing that doesn't happen very often... her liking a book that I like.
Coincidentally... I (view spoiler) which figures pivotally in the story... It's just a nice coincidence and really didn't affect me one way or the other while reading it. If anything it kicked me out of the narrative at the time.
Great Book.


For those unfamiliar with the reference: http://forgottenrealms.wikia.com/wiki...
It was said that every dwarf smithy had one magical creation in them, that once they created it, that they could never achieve that level of magnificence again...
I am literally afraid to read this book again lest I not like it as well as I did the first time.
Books mentioned in this topic
It (other topics)The Ocean at the End of the Lane (other topics)
The October Country (other topics)
From the Dust Returned (other topics)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (other topics)
More...