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There
is a bit absurdness to Andrew Sean Greer’s protagonist of Arthur Less,
something that the reader discovers early on in this brilliant Pulitzer Prize
winning novel, but is only verbalized later, is that despite seeing himself a
failure in life, he is indeed one of those people you meet in your everyday
life who somehow succeeds at many things, but never realizes it. Less though is
also about a man reaching “middle age” and wonders if he’s “too old to meet
someone” after a few relationship break-ups. This is the reality that some gay
men face, especially Arthur who’s had two long affairs that seemed to drift
apart (though one did, the other becomes the cliché of a younger lover leaving
him for yet another man).
There
is not much of plot, but the book becomes a sort of a travelogue, a gay version
of Love, Eat, Pray. It’s filled with
a wonderful prose that brings out happiness, sadness and many guffaws. It’s treatise
on accepting that life does not end at fifty (which many gay men wrestle with)
and that maybe, somehow, the universe will work in your favor, even if you do everything to resist it.
It’s
a bit sappy, then, but again, the prose is lyrical and pacing a slow burn
(there is a reference to Charlie Chaplin in the book, which reinforces the idea
[good or bad] that Arthur Less is much like Chaplin’s alter-ego of the Tramp
who stumbles though various adventures looking like a failure, but maybe is
not), which some might have trouble with. But this human comedy, this satire of
a life, is wonderfully realized here. It’s inspired in many ways and in this
day and age, maybe this is what we all need.
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