I'm baffled by the negative reviews of this book, a book that brilliantly reveals Oates's genius. Broke Heart Blues has much to say about the mythology of high school, the insidiousness of rumors, the romantic stories that permeate America, and the contrast between what people remember as true and what was actually true. The second section of the book reveals the true John Reddy Hart, not the mysterious and mythical character that dominated the fantasy lives of his classmates. The middle section reveals a teenager with issues, a young man nothing like what his classmates envisioned him to be--now a man approaching middle age who is simply trying to find his place in the world and get by. When Oates reveals what actually happened in the life of John Reddy when he was a child and adolescent, we see a confused, conflicted, and emotionally stifled person, which makes sense considering his role models were a narcissistic mother, an absent father, and a stubborn and eccentric grandfather. The realism depicted in Section Two contrasts starkly with Sections One and Three, which, narrated in a frantic, hyperactive, breathy collective vision, present a hyperbolic, emotional, and adolescent vision of the world as seen by wealthy white Americans who have little understanding of how privileged they are. Unsurprisingly, John Reddy Heart's classmates never have grown out of adolescence since America celebrates youth at the expense of maturity; and, like many middle-aged Americans, they yearn romantically for a past that resonates differently in their psyches, because of their insecurities and foibles, than in reality. The behavior of John Reddy Heart's classmates at the 30th reunion is hilariously uncontrolled and immature, as we see people nearing 50 years of age getting in touch with their 18-year-old selves, drinking, eating, dancing to the point of getting sick, and acting like entitled yet desperate adolescents. The revelers' desire to relive their "glory days" reveals all of their insecurities and failed dreams, which some of them continued to grasp at wildly. Despite all the tragedies that occur during the 30th anniversary celebration, the collective narrator (the "we" that Oates so brilliantly creates) plans for a 35th and 40th since real life can't compete with the mythology of youth to which so many of them cleave. This book is a masterpiece, a book unlike any I've ever read, and I highly recommend it. Unlike those who claimed they were trying a third or fourth time to sludge through it, I read this book with delight, finishing it in only three days. Grade: A