This is some of the most painful and excruciatingly long 146 pages I've ever read!
Here's a little background about how I became familiar with this title. When spree killer Andrew Cunanan was on his 1997 rampage, after murdering Gianni Versace, police located his hotel room at the Normandy Hotel in Miami Beach where they found, among other things, a copy of either this novel or Begley's other tome "About Schmidt." "As Max Saw It" seems like a book Cunanan would have read as it begins at a fashionable soiree on Lake Como, Italy, the exact place where rumor had it that Cunanan had first possibly met Versace.
I ran across a copy of the book at my mother's senior living facility's library and asked to borrow it. I was quite surprised to find this book there. Anyway, on to my review!
****SPOILERS FROM THIS POINT ON****
"As Max Saw It" describes the love affair between an older gay architect named Charlie and his young lover, Toby, who is dying of AIDS, although the disease is NEVER mentioned by name...WHY NOT? This part of the book is occurring in 1989, well into the age of AIDS. And nobody seems to even make the connection of what is ailing the boy. Perhaps this was an attempt to illustrate the deliberate blind eye and denial that many gay men continued to show toward AIDS. I may be giving the author too much credit here. And his illness is really the only major event in the book and it doesn't even occur until about page 100. Related to this, the most disturbing incident in the book occurs in its final scene, when Charlie bloodies the inside of his mouth with a file before per- forming oral sex on his dying lover. It is an act of self-sacrifice that binds them to the same horrible fate. Absolutely appalling! It's good that it occurs literally on the third to last page, otherwise I probably would have given up, despite the book's short length.
Other issues I had with the book, include a cast of very unlikable, pretentious and privileged characters. The book is written in the first person, that being Max, EXCEPT for Chapter 4 when for some reason after the second paragraph, Max begins to tell us about himself in the third person, for 25 PAGES! To me this was confusing and pointless. However, if not for that, I would know almost nothing about Max, although little insight into his character is gained from these tedious 25 pages. Oh, another big problem I had is that nowhere did Begley use quotation marks. All dialogue is embedded in narrative which makes it difficult at times to determine who is speaking. You have to pay extra close attention to the content to know this. Sometimes speakers can even change within the same paragraph. Okay, I'll admit I'm a slow reader and I have a touch of ADD, but this was a major challenge for me. The only reason I even finished this book was because of the short length and of course to write a scathing review of it. I hope you enjoy reading my review as much as I enjoyed writing it!