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The Historian
06-13-07, 07:05 AM
http://historian2wheels.blogspot.com/2007/01/book-review-memory-of-running.html

The Memory of Running by Ron McLarty

Smithy Ide doesn't have it easy. He's 279 pounds, 43, a smoker, and drinks too much. He's stuck in a boring, dead-end job in Rhode Island. He has no social life. And then he loses his parents the same week he discovers his beloved but insane sister's body lies unclaimed in a morgue in Los Angeles. While drunk, he starts to clean out his childhood home, finds his childhood Raleigh bicycle, on a lark decides to coast on it to the end of the driveway, and..... well, I won't go further with details. I want you to read this warm-hearted novel, and not just because it's a tale well-told.

One of the themes the author plays in the book is something that anyone who has worked to lose a lot of weight will recognize. The Memory of Running is what might be called a "travel novel", meaning a work in which the protagonist embarks on a journey physical and spiritual. The author makes this point by emphasizing that Smithy is on a "quest." Both Twain's Huck Finn and Voltaire's Candide, two other quest-followers, come to mind as distant cousins of Smithy; indeed, Candide and Smithy share empty-headedness as a feature of their personalities. However, unlike Huck and Candide, McLarty's hero is trying to work out his physical problems. And like many people who lose weight, Smithy, as he travels and his weight changes, grows as a person. Often fat people, trapped by their girth and their lifestyle, live the life of passive despair that Smithy 'enjoys' at the start of the book. McLarty's use of this 'weight loss trope' is subtle; he's helped here by having the clueless Smithy narrate the book.

Finally, the bicycling references in the book are modest; the bike serves as escape, transportation from Smithy's past and present, and as a symbol of that past. But the book's not about the bike. Nor is it about weight loss. But anyone who is fond of bicycling or has at some time had a problem with obesity will find this novel entertaining.

JumboRider
06-13-07, 07:08 AM
Neil,
You can sell a book like no one else. I think you missed your calling.

The Historian
06-13-07, 07:24 AM
Neil,
You can sell a book like no one else. I think you missed your calling.

I prefer to think I'm reviewing the book, not "selling" it. And I can trash as well as praise:

"It's fair comment to wonder why in a book with an alleged feminist viewpoint so many of the interviews and anecdotes are burdened with fencepost gossip about clothes, food, and what passes for music among the youth of today. For instance, we learn that Jen and Irina lived on vegetables and bread at one tournament, and that Jen (giggle) likes some punk rock band. But, as we know, the feminism of Ms. Shahade, like the pink hair on the cover, is a wig that can be put on at will. In this sense, the book sadly perpetuates the very sexist, woman-as-airhead stereotype it intends to subvert."

http://correspondencechess.com/campbell/articles/a060214.htm

Or even better, the ripping I give to a thankfully deceased chess magazine:

http://correspondencechess.com/campbell/articles/a030507.htm

"On the back cover, Squares, the self-described "chess world's picture magazine', asks, "Ready for something NEW to spice up your chess life?", and advertises itself as the chess magazine on the "razor's edge". The phrase is appropriate, since razors have been used for cutting and pasting since journalism began, and as you will see, Squares specializes in cutting and pasting. I gather they use a computer to edit Squares, but I suppose the phrase "the Control-C's edge" looked bad on the back cover."

"...we also are presented with such endemic Longarghea as a review on a recent book of GM Arthur Bisguier's best games and an essay on chess historian John Hilbert. We are so much better off for knowing that "Bisguier is a talent", which just one of the pearls of wisdom Mr. Long dispenses along with his customary ahead-of -the-dictionaries grammar and Chessco sales pitches."

JumboRider
06-13-07, 08:22 AM
LOL, but good reviews sell books. Bad reviews don't sell books. I simply meant that your review made me want to purchase the book.

The Historian
06-13-07, 08:44 PM
LOL, but good reviews sell books. Bad reviews don't sell books. I simply meant that your review made me want to purchase the book.

No offense taken. I just wanted to make clear I'm not a shill.