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300 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2000
"You wanna keep saying no, then ya better find your Inch, boy. Find it and protect it. Ya can cry and scream and beg and curse. Ya can do any damn thing ya gotta do to get through it, but as long as you don’t say yes, you win. Long as ya keep yer Inch for yerself, long as ya don’t pussy out and give it to [anyone:], you win. You win and they lose."
This is spoken by a character introduced briefly towards the end of the book, an old man who has refused any type of compromise in his life, and it's gotten him through a prison gang rape and continuing torture through dismemberment. And while in certain respects this is a deeply admirable quality, it has also prevented him from developing any meaningful relationships with others (because everyone wants a piece of you, wants to make you less). He's reached the end of his life, and while he maintains in full his sense of dignity and self-respect, one has to question whether it was worth the cost.
We All Fall Down focuses on one man's refusal to commit to a cause with which he agrees, but to which he isn't fully committed. By the end, his refusal to commit seems much more to be about digging his heels in and saying no simply for the sake of proving that he can. The only thing he strongly believes is that he won't be forced to commit to something, even if he agrees with it. This becomes the defining principle of his life, and it presents some interesting - if frustrating - reading.
Caldwell has an interesting premise and promising plot, but the poor writing and underdeveloped main character prevent the book from rising above average.