Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Jonathan Lethem: "The Gambler's Anatomy"


Soooo...this is a great book.

Lethem is kind of a wunderkind, god among men in my humble and very reserved opinion.  He has written a veritable plethora (God I love that word) of excellent fiction.

I confess that I have not read the first 4 books but I assure you that I will just to see how he game to his gifts of storytelling and commentary.  This book is just...powerful and creepy and compelling.  I was reading it while at the same time pre-reading Richard Dooling's new book which should come out late this year or early 2018.  it was nice to drop in and out of each. The thing about Lethem is no matter how mundane, provocative or tortured the subject matter... he amazes.  Not in the "look no hands!" type way of "look at me...LOOK AT ME!" prose but in a...wow...beautiful type way.  

So... a gambler?  Is there any more that needs to be said about this?  Can something more be gleaned from the subject that Dostoevsky or perhaps the movie "Rounders" didn't give me?  So, I was suspicious and perhaps even annoyed when I find out that the protagonists game of skill was...wait for it... BACKGAMMON!
I don't know if you have an opinion about backgammon.  It battles perhaps mahjong's for the sleepy, elitist factor but evidently... there is a lot more to it.  Additionally... evidently... a lot more to it.  Who new?  Who cares?  Well, you will.

Our main hero is a guy names Alex Bruno.  A rough and tumble quant from a single mom/addict/family in Oakland who hooks up with a gambling pimp of less than clear sexuality and they travel the world looking for whales who want the thrill of playing high stakes backgammon against the best in the world. 

it is vaguely interesting as a concept because it is so weird.  This is not a Vegas story.  This is not even "The Hangover" 2 or 3.  This is first class, brilliantly written literature... about backgammon.  Needless to say our hero is handsome, talented, leads a glamorous life and is deeply...deeply troubled.  In Thailand while fishing for a particularly evil whale he runs across and old high school classmate in the form of an ugly American traveling abroad with his somewhat hot (but way out of his league at first glance) girlfriend.  Some hi jinks ensue and we learn this guy, post high school blew up the gaming world and owns chucks of Oakland and has a fast food hamburger chain and a geeky gamer store and is worth...Trump like dollars (meaning hundreds of millions.  They part...oddly.

Our hero has been having some headaches.  He also has a gift of some minor mind reading which gives him something of an advantage.  he goes to Hamburg for his latest whale, meets a deeply troubled young lady and starts his game but collapses...has a seizure...goes to hospital... gets diagnosed with horrendous tumor and... loses everything.  Without giving too much a way there is another girl in Germany, a major surgery providing troubling results, a trip back to Oakland at the largess of his childhood acquaintance and a sick relationship/rivalry/employer/employee thing that keeps you reading.  The childhood friend is a beyond creepy, megalomaniac and is just...personally clueless evil to our protagonists blank slate.  Our hero is especially vulnerable post surgery and out of weird science experiment manipulation the childhood friend hooks him back up with the Hamburg girl for... oddness. The most intriguing character ends up being the Dude who cooks hamburgers at a local shop that competes with the other guys chain.  Things go down and down in Oakland where our hero continues his "losing streak" and it builds to a seriously ambiguous but exciting climax.

This book asks a lot of questions about money, aging, looks and life's big questions.  He does not provide the answers to the big questions but if you don't find yourself examining your own (or my own) mundane life a little more closely... well then you are just not paying attention.  Read this. It is just really well done and kind of fun...and creepy...and fun.

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