** now with cd review
so whenever anyone gives me a book to review, my trendency is to be more forgiving with it than if it's something i actually had to pay for or pick out for myself. it's like a nice reciprocal thing to do - you give to me, i give back. but this time, i didn't have to be too gentle, i really enjoyed this book. it is occasionally a little slick and tricky with its wordplay,and it's not my usual story,to be sure, but i found a lot of it to be spot-on and nicely lyrical. "the marooned oaks, bent as dried witches frozen in sacred acts, dotted the black hills of the mountains breaking from the coast, and grew blacker along the road to Paso Robles". unexpected imagery always gets to me. and this passage is rather long, but i liked it as a piece: "I couldn't bear to let Hal rot away into anonymous oblivion in The Amigo, the ramshackle hotel we lived in which decades before had been a toy factory warehouse. If dreams were once born in the belly of that old building's former incarnation then they sure as hell went back there now to die. No, too many unsigned bodies had been hauled out of the place already. Disaffected former wives surrendered to alcohol, abused and saintly prostitutes, zombie junkies with no discipline, general head cases fried too long under the unforgiving Southern California sun, vets, the discomfited scarred and obese, unknown Blues legends, and a score of forsaken others. The Amigo was first-rate for the crestfallen. Refuge is not a pretty thing. Hal and I ended up there for a similar core reason dressed up in different circumstances: We were each wholly alone in the world after losing something we couldn't afford to lose, which opened a hole so deep in our lives that absolutely nothing could possibly fill it." I don't know, that was just something at the beginning that i found myself rereading, i think i just liked the sentence about refuge, but it made no sense out of context, so i had to type the whole damn thing, despite my shitty typing skills.
let me just free-associate about l.a. for a minute: earthquakes, fake tits, the doors, small dogs, aborted expectations, expensive clothes, phil lewis, self-importance, glare, sun, sun fucking sun... so yeah - except for my long-dormant junior high crush on phil lewis, all bad things.and i've never actually been to l.a., naturally, my opinions are never based on anything concrete; i just have new york mindset about it as being somewhere far away and "other" in 'learn to swim' land. and i hate the heat. and i don't drive. so basically, i'm here where i am safe. and this isn't technically an l.a. novel, because it travels, but the beginning is sort of a love letter to the bitch of a city, which is his description, not mine. but i did find the descriptive passages of the city alluring,is the point, for all my left-coast suspicions. i have a headache and it is pushing on the critical functions of my brain, so if this makes no sense, forgive.
i'm working on getting this into the store, and all you locals can run in and pick it up and celebrate the lure of the other coast.
oh, and there's a cd, but i havent listened to that yet.
tom fuller rolls his eyes.
** so, yeah, that cd was not at all what i was expecting. i figured it would be all balls and blues and whiskey and driving, or something like the black crowes, but it was actually quite pretty guitar instrumentals, mostly. it's no niandra lades, but it's pretty nice all the same. i guess that's a review.