Sure, I enjoy reading about another man's sexual escapades as a voyeur as much as the next guy, but they make me distinctly uncomfortable as well. The way the story (and others like it) is written make me wonder - am I the one who's not normal for wanting a stable family life and rejecting my basest desires to protect that life? If these works are so celebrated, is it becuase they are based on "real life", and if so, is my version of life better or worse? Or is it simply because it's enetertaining? There is of course, no definitive truth available to us, but if my wife and kids think I'm special because I'm not the "everyman" in Roth's book, I'll take that as a positive.
I do recommend this book highly.
After reading through some of the linked reviews I searched for on Nextbook, I really think I should read Portnoy's Complaint.
And one other thing. Early in the book, the main character mentions a time in the past when prices in stores ended in .50 (not .99 as they are today). I'm not that old, but that sounds right. I wonder what the story is behind that change - inflation?
![](http://ec3.images-amazon.com/images/P/061873516X.01._SS500_SCLZZZZZZZ_V66861138_.jpg)
1 comment:
your: "when prices in stores ended in .50 (not .99 as they are today). I'm not that old, but that sounds right. I wonder what the story is behind that change - inflation?" -
I don't think it's inflation (well maybe inflation of forthrightness) - common business greed 'know how' has gained more cleverness & changed to a higher level how to cheat people to make them believe they're not paying that much - the .50 increasing of prices was the more honest way - but the philosophy of modern business manners is to make people believe they gain, while in fact they lose..
Post a Comment