Love & Relationships - Fiction, Disasters & Accidents - Fiction
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Overview
A master observer of the human psyche, Elissa Wald vividly renders the complex inner lives of men and women and explores how individuals alienated from the world, and from each other, put themselves in harmβs way. Alicia, a struggling writer who supports herself as a stripper, has been attracted to firemen ever since she was rescued from a burning building as a young girl. But her affair with a young firefighter named Jake is doomed to failure. Then she meets Jonah Malone, a Vietnam veteran who turns out to be the man who had saved her life years before. Through realistic, flawless storytelling, Wald tells of their marriage and its disintegration.Editorials
Publishers Weekly
New York City firefighters assume center stage in this meandering, sometimes clumsy debut novel. Alicia, a writer of bad poetry who strips to pay the bills, jump-starts the action when she rediscovers Jonah Malone, the fireman who saved her life when she was five but only after Wald spends the first few chapters chronicling Alicia's torrid three-month affair with another fireman, Jake Schiller, the very model of homophobic manliness. The improbable relationship between Alicia and Jonah culminates in marriage, though wedded bliss quickly deteriorates because of several factors: the psychological wounds caused by Jonah's abusive upbringing and service in Vietnam; the jealous machinations of Wes, Jonah's wealthy gay mentor; and a tragic fire that kills three firemen and figuratively envelopes Jonah in its aftermath. Wald, whose first book, Meeting the Master, was a collection of s&m tales and poetry, tries to spice things up with plenty of sex indeed, it seems every firefighter in New York is a muscular but sensitive stud. The novel piles on the clich?s ("like a light at the end of the night's tunnel") and flows unevenly, straying too often into bodice-ripper territory (including a mock rape or two), and on several occasions the firefighters grow indistinguishable from one another. Moreover, Alicia remains a half-formed character, her motivations and background a mystery that continuously vexes, because Wald employs her as a thread tying various characters together. The ease, for example, with which she falls in love with the much older, emotionally scarred Jonah is puzzling, lending the relationship a superficial sheen. Although Wald has taken on some interesting material here, the novelnever really heats up. (Oct.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.Book Details
Published
September 1, 2001
Publisher
Context Books
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781893956148