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Spectacular Happiness: A Novel

Spectacular Happiness: A Novel

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $9.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fireworks Supreme!
Review: I bought this book because I remember the author as a customer in a small art-house video store I used to work in. He always came in with his family, and they all seemed to make the most thoughtful choices for their viewing experience. I knew of his other books, however I gave up the psychology book of the week club after grad school, and never could bring myself to read one of them regardless of my fascination with this family. I was delighted when I saw that he wrote a fiction, and bought it immediately, even though it has been years since then, and I have long since departed from that part of the country.
I have to say, I began to cry upon reading the first passage of the book. In fact it took me several days to get past the first chapter due to the vividness of the emotion I was experiencing through this narrator. The love expressed for his son, and the reluctance to have to explain the events which follow in order to express it, are simply exquisite. This love, for his wife and his son, are what drive him to extrordinary means of expression. An adherence to the spirit of one's life and relationships requires strength, courage, and a perserverance rarely experienced in this world. They must be imagined. Though I like to believe this is what I saw, when I saw the doctor with the two boys and the dog, sometimes the wife, always the daughter, come to rent their weekly films.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fireworks Supreme!
Review: I bought this book because I remember the author as a customer in a small art-house video store I used to work in. He always came in with his family, and they all seemed to make the most thoughtful choices for their viewing experience. I knew of his other books, however I gave up the psychology book of the week club after grad school, and never could bring myself to read one of them regardless of my fascination with this family. I was delighted when I saw that he wrote a fiction, and bought it immediately, even though it has been years since then, and I have long since departed from that part of the country.
I have to say, I began to cry upon reading the first passage of the book. In fact it took me several days to get past the first chapter due to the vividness of the emotion I was experiencing through this narrator. The love expressed for his son, and the reluctance to have to explain the events which follow in order to express it, are simply exquisite. This love, for his wife and his son, are what drive him to extrordinary means of expression. An adherence to the spirit of one's life and relationships requires strength, courage, and a perserverance rarely experienced in this world. They must be imagined. Though I like to believe this is what I saw, when I saw the doctor with the two boys and the dog, sometimes the wife, always the daughter, come to rent their weekly films.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: is this what we're really like?
Review: I grew up in Bethesda, Maryland, a suburb of Washington, D.C. Most of the houses in the neighborhood were built in the 1960s. They lie low against the forested hills. Many of the 1960s houses can barely be seen from the street, despite the quarter-acre lot sizes and the fact that most of the houses are 4-bedroom affairs. Returning to this neighbor (Mohican Hills) today, one's senses are assaulted by the 1990s houses. The builders razed the trees and pushed the foyer roof as high as possible. The new houses have perhaps twice the interior space as the old ones but 10 times the visual impact. Kramer's well-written, smoothly flowing book is about the same phenomenon on Cape Cod and how a representative couple of old-style Cape residents deal with it.

Caveat: It feels as though the psychiatrist author mined his patients' collective neuroses to build the characters in this book. This gives the characters a rich texture but it also is a bit scary. Is this what we (Americans) are really like? Are we all this damaged?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: take it from a Cape Codder
Review: I've been recommending this book to everyone. The reviews in the newspapers give a sense of how much fun the book is, thrilling and amusing and sexy, and so on, but they miss its depth. The father-son relationship is very moving. The depiction of marriage, and of the way we assign an exact worth to men and women, is disturbing as well as comical. Yes, this is a great beach read, but it also hits home.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Smarts justifies violence?
Review: Kramer weaves an intricate story of social fabric and personal pain. He can 'out-nuance' the best of them. The protagonist is likable in the tragic way of Hamlet. He deserved better; here he rallies and makes it so, enjoying some honest titillation along the way. But there is no escaping the current underneath this story: things out of balance require radical action. In light of recent events, it is even more poignant. Who of us deserves to make that change happen in a violent way, even if no lives are taken? I am still wrestling with it, and that makes it good.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: my pick of the season
Review: Simply my favorite book of the summer/fall season. "Spectacular Happiness" is politically alert, and it's also exciting and touching-a great father-son story. The characters are well drawn, even the comic ones, like the psychotherapist who brings the other characters together. Really, a remarkable and original novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: my pick of the season
Review: Simply my favorite book of the summer/fall season. "Spectacular Happiness" is politically alert, and it's also exciting and touching-a great father-son story. The characters are well drawn, even the comic ones, like the psychotherapist who brings the other characters together. Really, a remarkable and original novel.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Worth reading, but his non-fiction is better
Review: The concept behind this book suddenly seems quaint--a terrorist who takes care not to kill people. If you can bear the awful irony that this concept presents in a world after September 11, 2001, this book is worth the effort it sometimes takes to read.

As other reviewers have noted, Kramer does not hesitate to display his knowledge of other great thinkers. The book modestly does not refer explicitly to the oevure of that great thinker, Peter Kramer (I say this without irony).

Two themes that are addressed at length in his non-fiction books, whether psychoactive drugs change the authentic self (_Listening to Prozac_) and how one makes the decision to leave a major relationship (_Should You Leave?_), dominate this book. A reader who has read Kramer's own thoughts on those subjects will sometimes stifle a smile at the way Kramer's thoughts appear in the minds and mouths of his characters in near-didactic fashion.

I suspect Kramer wrote this book partly to get his ideas before a broader audience. It is worth the effort to view the explication of those ideas, but Kramer's real strength is in the crafting on non-fiction.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Surprisingly Gripping
Review: There is some very good writing in Peter Kramer's first novel. Having read all his non-fiction, I approached Spectacular Happiness with trepidation; how many contemporary physicians have been able to produce a fictional work that actually speaks to a wider reading audience? Well Peter D. Kramer has. Full of pathos, dark musings, original ideas and well-developed characterizations, I could barely put it down. I'm not objective: I love the Cape, which is a major character in the book, but I am a critical reader and found this book impressive -- not just as a "first stab" at fiction, but as an intelligent and original novel, with important things to say about the way we live and the struggles of our inner lives. I highly recommend it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Suppose the rest of us are crazy?
Review: There is something about anti-depressant drugs that brings out the gonzo in novels - Walker Percy had them in the water supply in a Southern town, and the result was a hoot. Andrew Solomon (Noonday Demons) apparently tried an animist ritual involving at least one dead chicken, but I could not hear him laughing.

Kramer is far too literary and rooted in word-pictures of personality... to use Percy's scifi plot device, or perhaps to communicate with readers who like to skim, without stopping to savor (in passing, he zings such readers, but has far more zingers about his own profession).

I wonder if he wrote himself into the story, or at least a send-up with a bit of the true Kramer or his dreams?

I can't add much to the other reviews about the "bloodless terror" strand, though it does seem to help him flesh-out some of the most esoteric, opaque bits of French writings about revolution. It may be a bit easier to "walk a mile in the shoes" of a non-murderous anarchist?

Personally, 9/11 did not get in the way.


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