The Partisan - Hardcover

Cheever, Benjamin

  • 3.33 out of 5 stars
    9 ratings by Goodreads
 
9780786202539: The Partisan

Synopsis

With his first novel, The Plagiarist, Benjamin Cheever was lauded by reviewers everywhere for his "witty dialogues, memorable characters, mini-zingers ending each episode" (Newsweek). Cheever now fulfills the promise of that first novel with The Partisan, a story narrated by Nelson, a young film student at New York University. At the center are his "Aunt and Uncle" and his sister Nar (short for Narcissus). Uncle, Jonas Collingwood, is the revered and crusty author of "eighteen spectacularly gloomy novels. The critics were impressed with his eye for the telling detail. The public hadn't noticed." This cozy if dysfunctional quartet lead a cloistered life in the New York suburbs, with Nelson dreaming of owning a car, Aunt burning dinners, Jonas banging out his novels in the root cellar, and Nar charming men and desiring a horse. Then an article appears in the Herald Tribune hinting that Jonas's last book was a thinly veiled memoir of the years he spent with the resistance in Italy during the war. This gives Jonas just the right sort of image ("the novelist who shot men") to promote him as "The Hemingway of Westchester." With this newly found fame comes a buyout of his publishers by a German conglomerate, Ich Spreche Nicht Viel Deutsch ("best known for the manufacture of common household tranquilizers"), which offers him a huge advance to write his memoirs about being a partisan in Italy and thus solidify his new literary mythic status. In the wake of sudden and comical amounts of attention and money comes a fan bearing gifts with a certain (to Nelson) sinister intent. And so the stage is set for complications, revelations of family secrets, and much, much laughter. Written with the same accomplished style and humor that characterized The Plagiarist, Benjamin Cheever's The Partisan also reveals something new and rewarding - an even greater (and rarer) depth of feeling and concern, sure signs of growth in an already celebrated writer.

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From Kirkus Reviews

Once again, Cheever (The Plagiarist, 1992) chronicles life with a distinguished writer--in a novel that's even more diffuse than his first. Not nearly as funny as it thinks it is, this hurried fiction sets off in all sorts of directions, and never finds its way back. Nelson Collingwood, a 20-year-old virgin, and his sexually advanced sister live with their guardians, Aunt Elspeth and Uncle Jonas, in Westchester. Jonas is a much-admired but always broke novelist who rents a house on the Rockefeller estate, where he imposes his high-cultural view of things (e.g., no TV). After 16 novels with a small publisher known primarily for farm equipment catalogues, Jonas receives a huge advance for a WW II memoir, which his new publisher hopes will be his breakout book--the only problem being some doubt about Jonas's actual involvement in the war. Meanwhile, NYU student Nelson, an aspiring ad-copywriter, works for the summer at a local freebie ad paper, all the while pining for one Amy Rose, a suburban goddess spending her summer in Washington State. Nelson's ``Goodbye Columbus'' story is soon superseded by strange doings at home, where an obsequious biographer has attached himself to Jonas. All of which forces the family to reexamine its rather odd history, involving Aunt Elspeth's much prettier sister and the true parentage of Nelson and his own sister. While the biographer flatters his way into Jonas's life, Jonas's obnoxious new editor pressures him for a real commercial book. And Jonas delivers in record time so that he can bail out his sister-in-law from a bad debt and also buy Nelson a fancy car, which becomes the vehicle of his accidental death. Cheever fleshes out this elliptical tale with lots of sitcom sarcasm, plenty of bad jokes, and many pointless barbs at the innocent. His animus toward biographers and publishers may be justified, but seems like plain sour grapes here. All in all, a mess. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal

YA-An engaging coming-of-age novel. Nelson feels like a "fire sale baby" when he and his sister Narcissus are taken in by an uncle after their adoptive father dies. "Uncle" Jonas, a well-regarded but impecunious and unheralded novelist, is forever casting aspersions on Nelson's abilities and intelligence while depending on him and his sister for aid and comfort. Jonas is not mean, just crusty, and he really is an important part of their somewhat eccentric lives. Nelson describes the summer of 1991, when he is in love with Amy Snodgrass Rose who is in love with David Hitchens who is in love with Gloria Thomas. Since these young people are not even in the same state that summer, his love for Amy is somewhat unresolved. Equally unresolved is his place in his makeshift family, or, in fact, in the world at large. He seems to be cruising through young adulthood without definition or purpose. The events of Nelson's 19th summer and his growing self-awareness form the basis of this funny and bittersweet chronicle. YAs will be drawn in by the subtle yet sharp humor and the everyday predicaments the young man gets himself into in the context of his not-so-everyday family. The tone is light throughout. The end, while sad, is a logical denouement. A thoroughly enjoyable story with little of the depressing and frightening ingredients of much modern fiction.
Susan H. Woodcock, King's Park Library, Burke, VA
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780689121746: The Partisan

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0689121741 ISBN 13:  9780689121746
Publisher: Atheneum, 1993
Hardcover