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The Brothers Bishop > Synthesis

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message 1: by Troy (new)

Troy | 73 comments Mod
After reading the entire novel, ...


message 2: by Ted (new)

Ted (efcorson) Wow. There are a lot of things going on in this novel, but it's never confusing. I couldn't put it down. No emotion is spared, be it love, hate, guilt, lust, or depression. It touches on sensitive issues but in an unsentimental and un-creepy way. Tears and laughter in beautiful, economically-written prose. The dialog is youthful, straightforward, and salty. As much as the principal characters are gay or gay-freindly, this isn't about sex (of which there's plenty) as much as about the love between the title brothers, Nathan and Tommy, past and present. Just loved this book.


message 3: by Tom (new)

Tom (beachcombert) | 11 comments The early chapters of this novel irritated me -- Nathan's first-person voice seemed shallow and judgmental, and the slang filled with cliches -- but the book grew on me as I plowed on. A vacation or party get-together of diverse characters has been a situation used in a lot of gay novels and plays -- decades ago in the Gordon Merrick novels, for example, and then the infamous birthday party of "Boys in the Band." A lot of the acidic dialogue in this book reminded me of the dishing in the "Boy in the Band" but at a dumbed-down "Valley Girls" level. Gradually, though, I developed an interest in the characters, especially Simon and Tommy, even though Nathan's rantings seemed to be obscuring them, rather than revealing them. At its core, I would say this book is about Nathan's love/hate relationship with both his father and with his brother. Not sure I could buy the ending as realistic. For hundreds of pages, Tommy is presented (through his brother's eyes) as a self-centered wanton, and then, all of sudden at the end, becomes the guilt-ridden hero who opts for suicide. We also are left hanging with the question of what happened to Simon. It's a great plot for a film treatment; let's see what some directer might make of it.


message 4: by Ted (new)

Ted (efcorson) And I liked the simple (simplistic?), straightforward writing style. So different from something like Acimen's "Call Me By Your Name" which is so much more florid (and equally compelling). Takes all kinds, I guess, authors and readers!


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