I purchased this in both hard copy and audio, which I highly recommend. Hearing David Duchovny tell the story himself, with his own inflections, saying the words he wrote provides a deeper, fuller understanding of the characters, as he is who created them, designed them & gave them their personalities, words, & voices.
This novel is truly from the heart and it is reflected in his narration. Whereas his previous novel, Holy Cow, was a lovely little eccentric fable, BFD deals with much deeper issues, fathers, sons, loss, & baseball. It is both touching and funny, full of the quirky wit Duchovny has demonstrated in previous works and interviews. He is a master of allusion with a mind that makes lightning quick connections between multiple culturally literate references.
A common aspect in D.D.'s characters, present in his novels and scripts, that always surprises me is the deep sensitivity and vulnerability lingering just below the surface of all his characters, even in the snarkiest of the characters he has conjured into existence on the page. And, of course, as he is probably well aware, those characters are the ones who break our hearts the most when we see them lose their defenses and show any hurt or pain.
Listening to (& reading) BFD, at times, made my heart feel exposed, or that any given time it would be exposed, Hanuman-like, due to the intensity of feeling almost always present in the interactions b/n Marty & Ted, whether humorous or tragic. The poignant moments are particularly heightened emotionally when listening to the audiobook. I wanted to reach out to both give and receive comfort as Duchovny tells the story in his soft tones, his voice resonating with the grief, guilt, love, & regrets reflected within his characters.
The story takes place in 1978. Ted moves in with his estranged father, Marty, who is dying of cancer. Marty is rather curmudgeonly, typical of so many men in his generation. Ted is an adult, but a slacker with no real ambition. He is not a bad person, & not completely nihilistic, but he has lost any drive he may have once had and has resigned himself to the life of an underachiever. Both father & son carry heavy burdens of guilt and years of misunderstandings. Ted discovers that Marty's health & mood improves whenever the Red Sox win a game & begins, with the help of Marty's friends (the hilarious & marvelously constructed "Gray Panthers"), to create the illusion that the Red Sox are on a winning streak. Marty & Ted, despite all appearances to the contrary are more alike than different, demonstrated by their references, mutual knowledge & practical telepathy when it comes to thinking of the same poets & poems triggered by the same reference points.
This novel is full of love, laughter, life & baseball with a bit of sweet romance thrown into the mix. It revolves around everyday people, who live everyday lives, reflecting the fears, love, relationships, wishes & dreams that perhaps everyone carries in their hearts.
(For hardcore Duchovny fans, they may recognize some particularly personal references; not only regarding geography & Ted's educational & ethnic background, but of a mother who instilled a strict concern about money and a mention of an outline for a novel titled "Wherever There Are Two".)
Two specific moments of note:
1) In the audiobook, the narration of Chap. 76 is particularly beautiful.
2) The scene when Ted & Marty return to Marty's home after the big game painfully pricked at my heartstrings & I found myself suddenly break into heavy, body-shaking, wrenching sobs. I may laugh often with a book, but it is much harder for one to bring me to tears. "All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you; the good and the bad, the ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was." ~ Ernest Hemingway