I read about this novel from Jonathan Lethem's essay collection, "The Collapsing Frontier". I always enjoy reading Professor Lethem's assessment of literature and film. The plot of Mr. Bowman's 18 novel intrigued me: a dog that drives a car, and the story of the doomed affair between 18 year old Bud and 45 year old Sylvia.
Driving around aimlessly across vast American landscapes: From the Texas prairies, Sunny California, wild New Orleans, the bright, bleak lights of New York- their affair weaves back and forth misadventures, jealous lovers, and violence. Often brimming with sadness and a violence that often erupts at unexpected moments, it's a mercurial novel that is reminiscent of both Kerouac, Ginsberg, and John Rechy.
It reminded me most of Rechy's classic "City of Night"- protagonists without an aim often searching for themselves. The darkness that Mr. Bowman's novel also alludes to classic film noirs: The Big Heat, In a Lonely Place, the work of Emily Dickinson (her poetry is often brutal in its violent search for meaning) Hammett and Chandler. The narrative meanders back and forth where it is somewhat disjointed. At the end, I did not care about this quibble- still an excellent novel