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<channel>
	<title>. . . &#187; paul beatty</title>
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	<description>eugene lim&#039;s reading diary</description>
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		<title>SLUMBERLAND by paul beatty</title>
		<link>http://www.eugenelim.com/2009/01/08/slumberland-by-paul-beatty/</link>
		<comments>http://www.eugenelim.com/2009/01/08/slumberland-by-paul-beatty/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 01:57:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>eugene</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[paul beatty]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.eugenelim.com/?p=72</guid>
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a sly and outrageous book that i don’t know why isn’t getting more attention or wasn’t on any of the mainstream best of 08 lists. it may be provincial to say but i’ll read a hundred beatty’s before i read a book about friggin cricket.
a strange curse to be the smartest comedian in the room. [...]]]></description>
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<p><span id="freeTextreview26256725" class="reviewText">a sly and outrageous book that i don’t know why isn’t getting more attention or wasn’t on any of the mainstream best of 08 lists. it may be provincial to say but i’ll read a hundred beatty’s before i read a book about friggin cricket.</span></p>
<p>a strange curse to be the smartest comedian in the room. my two pfennigs: paul beatty is the funniest american writer alive. a riff master, there‘s so much comic bravado packed into this one i had to keep putting it down to walk around the room, big grin on my face. comedians are a dangerous breed, sacrificing a lot for the punch line but needing the vinegar of truth to make it sting.</p>
<p>on race — SLUMBERLAND’s sub- supra- and ur- text — beatty’s not 100% right, but who is. and beatty’s usually nudging us to surprising recognitions. on the other hand, when he’s less honest or more cheap, we get: just gags or cheap shock and awe tactics.</p>
<p>structurally and language-wise, the book, which thankfully shows beatty recovered from the sophomore slump of TUFF, is whipsmart and quick-footed but not groundbreaking. it starts out irregular — a black american DJ in 1989 berlin — and turns quickly comic book-y irreal. or maybe: para-paranormal. the DJ is in berlin searching for a quasi-legendary jazz musician who was last heard on the soundtrack of a bestiality porn flick, specifically one where a man fucks a chicken (the man in the blue vid turns out to be a prognosticating stasi agent). the jazz musician — dubbed the schwa because his sound, “like the inderterminate vowel is unstressed, upside-down, and backward” — eventually reveals himself at the eponymous slumberland bar to perform a percussive tour de force using only a beat up copy of a faulkner paperback.</p>
<p>it weakens just a bit in the middle when the berlin wall falls and the narrative stalls discussing african east german experience with an oddly overly-academic sociology angle. characters are introduced to make points but not so we really need them. but that’s okay. DJ darky — our lead protag — has enough character to spare. (also, it’s impressive but a little tiring to read convincingly about all the various musical ecstasies, which happens a<em>lot</em>) &#8230;but before too long the book re-finds its pace and hilariously works itself up to its plot crescendo of an ending.</p>
<p>a cliché and prolly a gratuitous aside: i think your contemporary comedian is one of the most tragic of beasts. absolutely self-willed to be impervious, there’s no possibility of intimacy. perhaps this is the point of the book — inescapable loneliness — and maybe i’m wrong, but the thing that seems to prevent SLUMBERLAND from sounding the real depths it seems capable of is its glibness.</p>
<p>but then. maybe glibness is the wrong word. the book seems to be fighting itself sometimes to exhaustion — jacob and the angel type combat — trying to become. and i felt very sympathetic in its struggle to be conflicting things at once. and maybe its glibness is in fact a method.</p>
<p>beatty on black humor: <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/22/books/review/22beatty.html " target="_blank">&#8220;I wish I&#8217;d been exposed to this black literary insobriety at an earlier age. It would&#8217;ve been comforting to know that I wasn&#8217;t the only one laughing at myself in the mirror.”<br />
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/22/books/review/22beatty.html </a></p>
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