Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Sleep-Over Artist: Fiction

The Sleep-Over Artist: Fiction

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $13.00
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: the best things in life are free
Review: I found this book in a box labeled "Free" on a college campus, and I was intrigued by the collection of little stories about a guy named Alex Fader who grows up in Manhattan. He starts out as a lost boy and becomes a lost man. But he's not so terribly selfish, just very confused about human relationships, compounded by the fact that his father died of cancer while he was very young and then raised by a single mother.

There are some disturbing misogynistic moments which seem centered around women's breasts -- like the poor classmate Tania whose top is ripped off at a bar mitzvah, no less.

But there are also some touching moments when he loses the woman he truly loves because she feels a need, on her 35th birthday, to finally move from New York -- a move that will not include Alex. I am sure many people can identify with Christine's need to go somewhere new, with Alex's heartbreak at being left behind.

It is not the greatest book ever written, but it is still a good book. It reminds me of Harry, the main character in Adam Davies' "The Frog King". Just everything you suspected about twentysomething guys put into writing, for better or worse.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Exploring Inner Thoughts
Review: I found this to be a well written, captivating book. It was so captivating that I read it three times. I normally do not like, or read very much fiction . What drew me to this book was the fact that I like Thomas Beller's non-fiction writing so much. I was therefore very curious to see what his fiction would be like. I started out by reading Seduction Theory, his excellent book of short stories, several of which deal with Alex Fader, the main character of this book. To my surprise, I liked it very much. So I decided to read this book next.
I was not disappointed. I found the writing to be excellent. The character of Alex Fader is well drawn, very complex and very interesting. I found the book to be ultimately very moving. Alex Fader is not always an easy character to like or understand, but his internal conflicts and great vulnerability eventually draw the reader into liking him and being concerned about his fate in life. Mr. Beller has done an excellent job with this book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Empty view into the life and thoughts of an urban guy
Review: I was excited at the potential of this book, and continued to the end with the hopes that it would get past being a sappy, indulgent glimpse into the unispired and uninspiring activities and thoughts of Beller's "every guy". Very empty and very disappointing.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Form Versus Fiction
Review: One lesson we've always learned is "don't believe everything you read." This includes summaries on the backs of books! If you were to read the synopsis on the back of The Sleep-Over Artist, you'd be incorrectly led to believe that this is a novel or at least a book containing a somewhat normal flow of events and plot. However, Beller has constructed a "fiction" of short stories linked only by their main character and his romantic experiences.

The fact that the blurb on the back of the book was misleading does not mean that this is a disappointing book. In fact, from a writing perspective, its very interesting the way in which Beller constructed The Sleep-Over Artist, following one character and revealing snapshots of his life to the reader. But this structure is also maddening at times. While the stories follow a standard time-line, tracing the main character from youth to his late 20's, almost all of these stories go unresolved. And following stories merely give slight insight into any resolution that has occurred. In fact, some characters are re-introduced as though the reader has not yet met the characters.

All these things combined, I'm not sure I understand Beller's intent. Did he originally start off writing short stories involving a central character and then decide to throw them into one volume? Are these autobiographical stores in which he changed the names and arranged them into this collection? Or did he begin with the intention of taking snapshots of the life of his main character and lose his way somewhere along the line? It's not clear. The Sleep-Over Artist is worth reading for its humor and insight into the frailty of relationships but the flaws of the structure of this fiction often overshadow the actual prose.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A boy who won't grow up
Review: The main setting for this novel is the concrete canyons of New York City where the main character, Alex Fader, spends his childhood in a high-rise apartment. Having personally grown up in a small town in the northwest, I have always regarded New Yorkers as being from an alien culture. This novel, perhaps, explains some of that culture.

The novel is written in a narrative form as related by the main character. It is written as a series of related short stories, initially about incidents in his childhood, and then about relationships with a succession of women. He is not exactly a gigolo, but is somewhat a parasite as he camps out with various girlfriends. He drifts through various jobs, including drummer with a rock band (with a girlfriend who makes sheep noises), but is not overly successful at anything.

Just as Alex seems to be developing a serious relationship, it abruptly ends and he is back with his mother. It seemed like there was a chapter or two missing. It is a somewhat interesting novel, but easy to set aside.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Enjoyable but amateurish
Review: This is an enjoyable but amateurish book about a shallow and annoying young man who passes through a succession of unsuccessful romantic relationships, along with some other significant life events. Various stylistic flaws should have been caught by an editor. For instance, especially in the first half of the book, Beller is given to juxtaposing contradictory emotions: too often we read of the main character's "mixture of malevolence and love," or "a mixture of sadness and exasperation and sexual excitation." Beller is no doubt trying to sound emotionally profound in these passages, but he doesn't make the effort to explicate these ambivalences realistically. Further, the book also does not end, it just terminates. And yet, on occasion Beller says something truly insightful, as in my favorite scene when the main character, Alex, tries to kiss a woman he'd been wooing through feigned indifference; finding himself rebuffed, he bows out awkwardly, admitting that once you've tried to kiss a woman and failed, you can't return to the indifference routine. But such rare gems are few and far between. In sum, this book is better than watching commercials, but for something better read A Trip to the Stars.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not as racy as you think...
Review: Thomas Beller's The Sleep-Over Artist is a novel-in-short-stories, all centered on the character of Alex Fader. Alex is a Jewish kid who lives on Riverside Drive in Manhattan, and has the childhood experiences unique to natives of that island. We first meet Alex in the seventies when he is six years old and we follow him to his early twenties. There is no real story to the novel - it is merely a collection of episodes forming a sort of Bildungsroman. To say the least, Alex is a morally ambivalent character and he is not always likeable. The book's title and its blurbs lead one to believe that it is more risqué than it actually is. Yet it is well-written and provides a good look into the life of a young, educated, Manhattanite.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not as racy as you think...
Review: Thomas Beller's The Sleep-Over Artist is a novel-in-short-stories, all centered on the character of Alex Fader. Alex is a Jewish kid who lives on Riverside Drive in Manhattan, and has the childhood experiences unique to natives of that island. We first meet Alex in the seventies when he is six years old and we follow him to his early twenties. There is no real story to the novel - it is merely a collection of episodes forming a sort of Bildungsroman. To say the least, Alex is a morally ambivalent character and he is not always likeable. The book's title and its blurbs lead one to believe that it is more risqué than it actually is. Yet it is well-written and provides a good look into the life of a young, educated, Manhattanite.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: not bad, but not great either
Review: While at times engaging, this coming-of-age tale ultimately didn't bring anything new to the genre. I was never so bored that I put it down, but nor did I find any of the characters particularly engaging... they seem to float through life, never connecting with anyone, including the reader. There were points where the narrative jumped sideways in a jarring way, especially towards the end, that were too abrupt, unexplained, and made the book unsatisfying. Good material, but needs a good editor!


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates