From Publishers Weekly:
This is one dense book. Marcus (The Art of Cartography, a story collection) filters every reportorial detail through the minutely calibrated sensibility of his narrator, Joel La Vine. Jewish, bisexual, lately impotent and lately pudgy, the 31-year-old American English teacher is hanging out in Berlin after the collapse of the wall and experiencing less than high times. If Christopher Isherwood rushes immediately to mind, forget about it: Joel's a camera, but he's also an encyclopedia, seemingly aware of even the most obscure cultural nuances, from habits of sausage eating to the details of Gustav Mahler's life. He's also up on whatever else a late-century postmodern flaneur might require to sort through a society in political disarray, victimized equally by its Nazi past and its increasingly pessimistic?and racist?present. Riffing on everything from Kant to Elvis Costello, old girlfriends and Brecht, and keeping one eye eternally focused on the legacy of Kafka (to whom Marcus owes the title), Joel unfurls elaborate, occasionally footnoted, disquisitions on the subject of Germany and the Jews. Gradually, the entire novel inhales the question of what it means for Joel to be a Jew and transforms it into the only thing that propels an otherwise lethargic story. By thinking about being Jewish, and about being Jewish in Germany, Joel begins to return to his own history, which features a pair of dying parents in Milwaukee and a record of sexual misadventures, along with a few tidbits of what might have been love and happiness. Marcus's writing will give many readers a pounding headache as he forsakes drama for discursiveness. It's a measure of his intelligence that he makes his method seem appropriate to his subject.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
This remarkable first novel reverberates between postwall Berlin and Milwaukee. Yet the tour we are given by the young American abroad who serves as narrator takes place mostly in his head, as various sights in the restored German capital bring to mind his encounters with a motley crew of expatriots and German citizens?or "Germs," as one of his acquaintances calls them. The narrator, a self-described impotent Jewish bisexual, brims with opinions on every conceivable subject. With mordant humor, he lays bare the foibles of everyone who has crossed his path, treating us to statements like "parties always have official purposes in Germany, where people are expected to throw their own birthday parties." Yet while the work is perceptive and strongly evocative of Berlin, it is finally unsuccessful as a novel. Because the "narrator" bears such close resemblance to the author, the book reads more like a memoir than fiction. In addition, for some readers, the unvarying texture may wear thin. A possible candidate for literary collections or libraries whose patrons have an interest in European affairs.?Edward B. Cone, New York City
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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