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Lowboy: A Novel |  | Author: John Wray Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy New: $4.89 as of 2/8/2010 18:14 CST details You Save: $20.11 (80%)
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Seller: bookcloseouts_us Rating: 40 reviews Sales Rank: 8379
Media: Hardcover Pages: 272 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9 x 5.9 x 1
ISBN: 0374194165 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780374194161 ASIN: 0374194165
Publication Date: March 3, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review Amazon Best of the Month, March 2009: I'm not the first and certainly won't be the last reader to herald Lowboy for the subtle homage it pays to one of the best-known heroes in 20th century fiction, or to envy and delight in its masterful vision of New York City as seen from its darkest, most primal places. What's most seductive for me about John Wray's third novel--and arguably the one that puts him squarely on the map alongside contemporary luminaries like Joseph O'Neill, Jonathan Lethem, and Junot Diaz--is how skillfully it explores the mind's mysterious terrain. This isn't exactly uncharted land: John Wray's Will Heller--a.k.a. Lowboy--is a paranoid schizophrenic off his meds and on the lam, certain of both his own dysfunction and of the world's imminent collapse by way of global warming, but Wray handles that subtext delicately and is careful to make Will's mission to "cool down" and save the world feel single-minded without being moralistic. Wray invokes all the classic elements of a mystery in the telling, and that's what makes this novel such a searing read. As Will rides the subway in pursuit of a final solution to the crisis at hand, we meet (among others) Will's mother Violet, an Austrian by birth with an inscrutable intensity that gives the story a decidedly noir feel; Ali Lateef, the unflappable detective investigating Will's disappearance whose touch of brilliance always seems in danger of being snuffed out; and Emily Wallace, the young woman at the heart of Will's tragic odyssey. The novel moves seamlessly between Will's fits and starts below ground and Violet and Ali's equally staccato investigation of each other above. This kind of pacing is the stuff we crave (and we think you will, too)--the kind that draws you in so unawares that before you know it, it's past midnight and you're down to the last page. –-Anne Bartholomew
John Wray on Lowboy
Three years ago, not long after I'd begun Lowboy, I made a decision that--in retrospect--even I find slightly odd: to write as much of the novel as possible on the New York City subway. The reasons for this admittedly drastic step ranged from the practical (subway cars have no internet access, no cell phone reception, and next to no procrastination options) to the wildly romantic, if not outright ridiculous. Like some over-eager method actor, a part of me was convinced that I'd write about the subway more vividly and honestly if I immersed myself in it absolutely. Fully half of Lowboy's narrative takes place underground, much of it in the subway tunnels, so getting the look, smell, and feel of subterranean New York right was crucial to the book's success. It also happened to be cheaper than renting an office.
The challenges of my new workplace weren't the ones that I'd expected. I was amazed at how effectively I was able to tune out the commotion around me, simply by putting on headphones: a good playlist on my laptop was essential, but beyond that, as long as I avoided rush hour, staying focused presented no great problem. The seats in the older cars made my back hurt after a few hours, certain stretches of track in the outer boroughs were so rough that it was hard to type properly, and restrooms were few and far between, but I adjusted to those things in time. The more comfortable I got, however, the more my frustration grew, for the simple reason that the subway was starting to feel like my living room. I was becoming resistant to its strangeness: I was seeing it with the eyes of a commuter. Nothing could have been farther from the point of view of my protagonist, a sixteen-year-old schizophrenic boy, newly escaped from the hospital, to whom even the most familiar things feel alien. The harder I looked, the less I seemed to see.
I'm not sure what triggered the change that came a few weeks later, but I know that it came suddenly. I was riding the Coney Island-bound F in the early morning, staring blankly out the window at the tunnel racing past; I remember feeling bored and vaguely hungry. When I turned around, though, I seemed to be in a different car completely. For the first time, every feature of the interior had a clear purpose to me: the seats stopped short of the floor for ease of cleaning, the orange and brown tones were meant to encourage well-being, and the polka-dot pattern on the walls, which I'd never looked at closely, was in fact made up of the official seal of the state of New York, repeated countless times in brown and grey. The discovery made me a little paranoid--on the lookout, suddenly, for more signs of Big Brother's presence--which was just the state of mind I'd been pursuing. From then on, the novel all but wrote itself.
Product Description
Early one morning in New York City, Will Heller, a sixteen-yearold paranoid schizophrenic, gets on an uptown B train alone. Like most people he knows, Will believes the world is being destroyed by climate change; unlike most people, he’s convinced he can do something about it. Unknown to his doctors, unknown to the police—unknown even to Violet Heller, his devoted mother—Will alone holds the key to the planet’s salvation. To cool down the world, he has to cool down his own overheating body: to cool down his body, he has to find one willing girl. And he already has someone in mind. Lowboy, John Wray’s third novel, tells the story of Will’s fantastic and terrifying odyssey through the city’s tunnels, back alleys, and streets in search of Emily Wallace, his one great hope, and of Violet Heller’s desperate attempts to locate her son before psychosis claims him completely. She is joined by Ali Lateef, a missing-persons specialist, who gradually comes to discover that more is at stake than the recovery of a runaway teen: Violet—beautiful, enigmatic, and as profoundly at odds with the world as her son—harbors a secret that Lateef will discover at his own peril. Suspenseful and comic, devastating and hopeful by turns, Lowboy is a fearless exploration of youth, sex, and violence in contemporary America, seen through one boy’s haunting and extraordinary vision. John Wray is the author of two critically acclaimed novels, The Right Hand of Sleep and Canaan’s Tongue. He was named one of Granta magazine’s Best of Young American Novelists in 2007. The recipient of a Whiting Award, he lives in Brooklyn, New York. Early one morning in New York City, Will Heller, a sixteen-yearold paranoid schizophrenic, gets on an uptown B train alone. Like most people he knows, Will believes the world is being destroyed by climate change; unlike most people, he’s convinced he can do something about it. Unknown to his doctors, unknown to the police—unknown even to Violet Heller, his devoted mother—Will alone holds the key to the planet’s salvation. To cool down the world, he has to cool down his own overheating body: to cool down his body, he has to find one willing girl. And he already has someone in mind.
Lowboy, John Wray’s third novel, tells the story of Will’s fantastic and terrifying odyssey through the city’s tunnels, back alleys, and streets in search of Emily Wallace, his one great hope, and of Violet Heller’s desperate attempts to locate her son before psychosis claims him completely. She is joined by Ali Lateef, a missing-persons specialist, who gradually comes to discover that more is at stake than the recovery of a runaway teen: Violet—beautiful, enigmatic, and as profoundly at odds with the world as her son—harbors a secret that Lateef will discover at his own peril.
Suspenseful and comic, devastating and hopeful by turns, Lowboy is a fearless exploration of youth, sex, and violence in contemporary America, seen through one boy’s haunting and extraordinary vision. “Lowboy is uncompromising, often gripping and generally excellent . . . One of the novel’s many pleasures is just going along: putting yourself fully in the hands of the story and its author, being drawn in, gradually immersed, making the connections, appreciating those seeds as they bloom into the tale’s developing complexity, danger and tragedy. By the time it all falls into place, the reader is long hooked and turning back is not an option . . . This is a meticulously constructed novel, immensely satisfying in the perfect, precise beat of its plot.”—Charles Bock, The New York Times Book Review “ Lowboy is uncompromising, often gripping and generally excellent . . . One of the novel’s many pleasures is just going along: putting yourself fully in the hands of the story and its author, being drawn in, gradually immersed, making the connections, appreciating those seeds as they bloom into the tale’s developing complexity, danger and tragedy. By the time it all falls into place, the reader is long hooked and turning back is not an option . . . This is a meticulously constructed novel, immensely satisfying in the perfect, precise beat of its plot. Wray, however, has larger goals than a thrill ride. The book's core is a nexus of tragedy—the tragedy of a 17-year-old girl who, though she knows better, might do anything for the boy she loves; the tragedy of a mother whose life has been devoted to her son, yet who is incapable of helping him and who just may have been the source of his troubles; the tragedy of a middle-aged man caught between protecting the public and helping a parent; and finally, ultimately, the tragedy of a bright and beautiful teenager who not only must deal with all the confusions and pressures of being 16, but who, through no fault of his own, is not stable enough to be able to purchase a cupcake without confrontation. I'd be proud to be seen reading this novel on the downtown 6, or anywhere else at all.”— Charles Bock, The New York Times Book Review
"What ever happened to the American Man? You know, the one who bullied and swore and drank his way through novels full of cigarette smoke, big cars and red meat? The one who'd abandon his family for a prostitute, or coerce his girlfriend into a threesome, or sleep with the housekeeper after murdering his wife? What happened to all those Rabbits and Portnoys and Rojacks and Wapshots and Herzogs? And does anyone really miss them? Judging from a sampling of recent male-penned fiction, the answer is no, not really . . . Which brings us to a tale told by a schizophrenic teenager, John Wray's dizzyingly seductive Lowboy. Wray's protagonist is on the lam from a mental institution, loose among the commuters and winos and rolling thunder of the Manhattan subway. Making your central character deeply insane is, of course, a risky and ambitious trick, but Wray carries it off with a fluid, inventive style that rises at times to a frightening pitch. Lowboy is an amplified hero for our times; despite his violence and craziness and incoherence, he is fundamentally sweet and in search of love."—Michael Lindgren, The Washington Post
"John Wray is less interested in Lowboy’s picaresque circuits than in his mental circuits, whose damaged condition is brilliantly, compassionately evoked in the novel . . . Wray is never boring, largely because he has an uncanny talent for ventriloquism, and he seems to know, with unerring authority, how to select and make eloquent the details of Lowboy’s illness. He uses a variety of literary techniques . . . What is impressive about the book is its control, and its humane comprehension of radical otherness. In this regard, it ideally justifies itself, as one always hopes novels will. You can imagine replying to someone who was curious about what it’s like to be schizophrenic, 'Well, start with John Wray’s novel.' Lowboy may often be lost to himself, but he is not lost to us. Wray knows how to induce and then manage a kind of epistemological schizophrenia in the reader, whereby we can inhabit Lowboy’s groundless visions and still glimpse the ground they negate. There is a brilliant scene, like something out of Pinter, in which Lowboy is at a bakery in the Village, buying cupcakes. Emily waits for him outside. He is
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 40
sad but true March 6, 2009 Jacob Shade (Tucson, AZ) 48 out of 57 found this review helpful
After reading the Sunday Times I was eager to get my hands on this book. The notion of detailing the psychology of a teenage schitzophrenic appealed to me because of the sheer challenge such a project would entail - an attempt to express the ineffable, if you will. It is difficult to argue that Wrey succeeds in his effort, since I have no personal experiance with schitzophrenia, but the psychology that he does map out in this underground world (so to speak) is nothing short of impressive.
One has to applaud Wrey not only for the control of his prose and the range of his strokes, but also for all the subtleties that bring out the character of the protagonist and of the city he exists in. For instance, the setting is the New York City subway, which, like public transportation systems in most major cities, is filled with that strange sense of "otherness." The subway itself has that schitzophrenic, "wasteland" (in the TS Eliot sense of the word) surreality. It's like looking well under the cracks of society, and, in effect, finding the unstable essence underneath. There are other subtle aspects of the narrative that work to same effect (like ciphers embedded in the text, or the ebb and flow of the structure), but I probably shouldn't spoil these things for others.
There were a couple of instances where I felt a little enclosed in the simple, declarative style of minimalism that Wrey wrote in. On the other hand, the decision to do seems fitting and appropriate; that is, symptomatic of the protagonist's incapacitating schitzophrenia. Other times the way that Wrey describes the surreality of this almost hallucinogenic world has a poetic edge that is on point.
I wouldn't say that this is my favorite novel, or the best written novel, and certainly not a novel for everyone, but it is a fantastic display of literary sense.
I called this review "sad but true" because this novel, in its entirety, really is sad when you conisder it, but it's also true, especially given the social stigma that sorrounds mental illness. To try and write a novel that handles such subject matter fairly is a kind and sympathetic gesture.
Suspense! March 9, 2009 Amber Pierce (New Orleans) 45 out of 55 found this review helpful
This is just by far the novel of the year for me--profound and beautiful and edge-of-your-seat thrilling at the same time. Where did this John Wray come from? I hadn't heard about either of his other two novels, although the critics seem to have gone ga-ga over them, too. I can't gush over this book enough. I was so entertained and entranced reading it that at one point I didn't even realize I was crying. I just flipped over this thing. Did I mention that it's also really funny?
John Wray's masterpiece March 15, 2009 Ronald Stainbrook (Harrisburg, PA USA) 18 out of 23 found this review helpful
Having stumbled upon this novel quite by accident, I was mesmerized by the story of a psychotic adolescent who has escaped from a mental institution and his mother's frantic efforts to save him or to save anyone whom he might harm in a story that covers just a little over 24 hours.
Many parts of the book are told through the paranoid schizophrenic eyes of the beautiful 16-year old boy, adding a great deal of realism to the tragic yet hopeful story. Wray has apparently accomplished a great deal of insight into the mind of paranoid schizophrenia as well as the mind of innocent youth throughout the world.
Woven into this thrilling story is the beautiful and enigmatic mother and the thoughtful and provocative detective she hires to catch the boy before he harms himself or someone in his way to accomplish what he must accomplish to save the world.
Reserve some time for this novel because once you start reading it, you won't be able to put it down.
The Terrain of the Mind April 23, 2009 Amos Lassen (Little Rock, Arkansas) 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
Wray, John. "Lowboy: A Novel", Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2009.
The Terrain of the Mind
Amos Lassen
Will Heller is a 16 year old boy living in Manhattan. He has stopped taking his prescribed antipsychotic medication and has left the hospital where he was being treated and wandered into the tunnels of the city's subway system. He thinks that the world is about to end and he is the only person who can save it. Will's mother, Violet, is especially upset about this and Lateef is on the case. As Lateef follows Will's movements, he begins to learn about the boy.
This is a hard book to classify by genre. It is a thriller and there is a lot of suspense yet it is also a reverie. The amazing thing is that we find a way to become part of the novel and this is what hooked me. Wray looks at human relationships which have the cloud of insanity over them and with its fast moving plot and wonderful humor, this is a book that you do not want to miss. We empathize with Will and in that we are witness to the human psyche. In visiting Will's underground, we are made aware of our own world.
Wray writes with subtle prose which grabs us on the very first page and the writing is sublime. But it is not just the prose that pulls us in--the story is also one that is just interesting and a brilliant observation of the young teen. It covers many diverse issues and it is Will that ties everything together. As I neared the end of the book, I realized that when I closed the covers for the last time, I would be saying goodbye to a friend and I did not want to. "Lowboy" could very well become the book of this year and even of several years to come.
A Brilliant Book, A Masterpiece April 22, 2009 Bonnie Brody (Fairbanks, Alaska) 6 out of 9 found this review helpful
This is a brilliant book, a masterpiece. Because it has the ability to bring about such intense emotional reactions and is so riveting, writing an adequate review of it is very difficult. It is like trying to describe why I get goosebumps when I listen to my favorite symphony played by the greatest orchestra or trying to describe why I felt the way I did when I first saw Botticelli's paintings at the Uffizi Museum in Florence.
This book is about a schizophrenic adolescent named Lowboy. Lowboy likes to ride the subways of New York. He has recently run away from the psychiatric facility where he was detained for over a year after pushing his girlfriend onto the subway tracks. His mother and the police are searching for him. The chapters alternate between ones that are in Lowboy's voice and others that are from the vantage point of the detective, Ali Lateef, and Lowboy's mother, Yda,who are searching for Lowboy.
In the chapters that are in Lowboy's voice we are taken into the world of a schizophrenic. As a clinical social worker who has worked extensively with the seriously and chronically mentally ill, I have never read a book that catches so lyrically, poetically, and tragically the true sense of what it is to be a paranoid schizophrenic. John Wray gets it. He paints a picture with his words, creating a sensibility and truth about this disease.
As Lowboy says on page 133, "The order of the world is not my order". He has been trying to buy some cupcakes and does not know how to convey the number of cupcakes he wants, what kind he wants or how to navigate the issue of cost. The situation ends up with Lowboy being asked to leave the store.
I found the following passage the most moving description of Lowboy's illness from his own perceptions. It is a passage from a letter to his mother.
"I was sitting in the Smoking Room reading the Wall Street
Journal when I saw the Schoolmaster aka Dr. Fleisig slid-
ing sideways down the hall. Fleisig is a friendly Medi-
terranean man he looks a little bit like Jacques Cousteau.
But this time I jumped up & dropped my cigarette and ran
to the door. Because I knew by then it wasn't really
Fleisig. He was changing his haircut every 6 or 7 steps
& playing temperature games inside his body. & at night
he used my hands and mouth to eat with." p. 144
The chapters from the detective and Lowboy's mother's perspective help give the reader additional information about Lowboy's childhood, his first psychotic break and the nature of his symptoms. His mother's grief and fear for his well-being are palpable. The detective is kindly and over time appears to be smitten with Lowboy's mother.
The story line is riveting. Lowboy is seeking his girlfriend who he is not supposed to see. He is also very worried about global warming. As he rides the subway lines we are privy to his inner thoughts, hallucinations and delusions. Mr. Wray has done his research about schizophrenia very thoroughly. Nothing seems artificial or postured.
This is a remarkable book, one that I believe has staying power over time and will be read for decades to come. It is rare that I read a book that thrills me. This one has. I applaud Mr. Wray and am grateful I had the opportunity to read this book.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 40
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