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Slackjaw

Slackjaw

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Grad Student Drunk Goes Blind In An Entertaining Way
Review: Although I rarely read Knipfel's columns in the New York Press, I read this book in one sitting. As an oft-suicidal drunk I certainly related to much of what Knipfel wrote in this blackly comic memoir. He certainly does seem to be a bad-luck magnet. And I personally don't care if his stories are embellished--what writer doesn't, after all? (To Knipfel's neighbor: he makes it quite clear that he is not entirely blind and often does not use the cane. And he is extremely detailed, both about the retinitis pigmentosa and the brain lesions...WHY would he make that stuff up??) The writing is that of a smart, under-employed dude who prefers living on the dark side. We all know lots of folks like that. My only cavil is that Knipfel would probably feel a lot less depressed if he addressed his alcoholism frontally, but at this point it seems too interwoven into his world view and self-characterization for him to attempt that. (Believe me, I've been there.) Perhaps when he's older and the body stops being able to tolerate it. In any event, I recommend this book highly.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Eyes Wide Open
Review: For 2 nights I sat entranced by the words on Knipfel's pages. I laughed at some parts and felt naked while reading others...little did I know how much in common I would have with a blind alcoholic who is also fighting the ramifications of an inoperable brain lesion. Jim's stories and anecdotes reach far beyond the confines of his own existence - I think we all at one point or another have come face to face with our own "Fake me". His honesty in describing his experiences throughout his life (so far!) won't just inspire those who are blind or are heavy drinkers or have brain diseases. I think he may have just inspired a new generation to yield their pens and stick it to the world.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Sometime depressing, often hilarious look at an unusual life
Review: I had read a lot of this book already when its pieces were originally published in the NY Press, but Knipfel ties it all together nicely with some new notes that really illuminate his truly interesting life experiences. I often wonder how much of his storytelling is true and how much is embellishment, but in the end I don't really care because his stories are intriguing and his sense of humor is a strong and important respite from the struggles with his various ailments (retinitis pigmentosa, a brain lesion that induces "rage seizures" if he misses his meds, etc.). I highly recommend this book, not as a story of "one man's struggle with blindness," I think that would insult the author. Look at it more as a compelling series of anecdotes from a man who's been through more than anyone really deserves.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Like reading a fifteen-year-old's journal
Review: I like this book. I like Jim Knipfel's writing in general. He's quite good, and seems to be a naturally gifted author who's learned the ropes from his years as a columnist. In a strange sort of way, I consider him to be yet another link in the line of writers first described in the 1950s as the Beats. He measures up to many of those great truthsayers, and I always look forward to more work from Mr. Knipfel.

Long may he linger.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hard to defend laughing out loud about blindness, etc.....
Review: I'm one of those people who love "true medical/Emergency Room/crime/forensic pathology" kinds of stories and am especially fond of sick humor. I read this book during downtime at work and had to stop reading because I kept laughing so hard I was almost crying. When co-workers asked what was so funny, they looked at me strangely when I tried to explain that it was the memoirs of an alcoholic, sometimes-employed man who was facing impending blindness. Go figure!! I recommended it to my equally twisted brother who liked it, as well.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: All the depression without the self-pity
Review: It's hard for me to pinpoint why I devoured this book almost as soon I picked it up. But I can say that of all the memoirs I've read lately, this was the most riveting.

Not once does the author ever give you a single moment of, "Why me?" and yet you still get the full impact of the pain, frustration and horror of his incredible life.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Like reading a fifteen-year-old's journal
Review: Jim Knipfel is an idiot, truly. He's the type of person that delivers stories on characters like Werner Herzog and Ed Gein, very self-aggrandising, and, most significant to his idiot status, fails to understand anything at all. Want to be like Jim Knipfel? Quickly read a story in the newspaper, spend the next ten years watching The Nanny, then write a story based on what you read in the newspaper, and then assume the role of expert on the whole thing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Depressing fun
Review: Knipfel is a legally blind, suicidal, alcoholic, philosophy major who knows how to look at the brighter (or at least the more humorous) side of life. Without taking the typical "Why me?" or "Poor me" route as many people would, he incorporates the "just deal with it" attitude. I wouldn't consider this a happy or feel-good about yourself book by any means. It's just the memoirs of a man who has been through a lot and can weave a good story out of the experiences. Some of the events have probably been exaggerated a bit to make them more compelling, but even so the underlying feeling is there.

A quick and easy read told by a good storyteller. I'm starting his next book "Quitting the Nairobi Tribe" now, and can't wait to see what happens next.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: won't make oprah's list
Review: Refreshingly untouchy feely in a touchy feely world. I laughed out loud many times throughout this book. Nothing grand and often goes nowhere, but I enjoyed the ride all the same.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: LED BY THE BLIND
Review: Slackjaw By Jim Knipfel

This well-written memoir of career setbacks, divorce, brain tumors, encroaching blindness, and miscellaneous failure is -- well, believe it or not -- it's funny and even warm-hearted. Knipfel has a gift for appreciating the quirky, the smart, and the loveable, whenever they appear in his world of both metaphorical and literal darkness.


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