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Goodlife [Hardcover]

Keith Scribner
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Dec 12 2012
A chilling psychological study of an ordinary husband and wife consumed by their pursuit of the American Dream.

The GoodLife is based on the true story of the kidnapping of an Exxon executive in suburban New Jersey by an unlikely pair of criminals: a middle-aged, middle-class husband and wife, deeply in debt. He was the son of a retired cop; she was the mother of two. Together, they believed they were entitled to more, to a taste of the good life. Intrigued by the audacity of their crime and its psychological underpinnings, award-winning writer Keith Scribner turned his fascination into an unsettling, compulsively readable novel about the American Dream gone awry.

Told from five different points of view, The GoodLife unfolds over the course of three excruciating days. As the couple's carefully wrought scheme begins to falter and their desperation mounts, the novel becomes an engrossing depiction of how a tenuous moral hold comes undone. As much a cautionary tale as a penetrating thriller, Scribner's debut is about the slippery seduction of relative truth and the dangerous lure of entitlement. "Keith Scribner has written his way into the sordid center of a riveting, morally complex crime. He has given us a world -- our world -- that is full of macabre humor and gruesome intimacy, a world in which money talks, sniggers, tempts, and lies. Even as you begin to realize where the fates of his characters are leading, you read on with quickening excitement." --Scott Spencer, author of the New York Times Notable Book of the Year MEN IN BLACK

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

An ordinary middle-aged New Jersey man, heavily in debt and sick of merely dreaming of wealth, cooks up a doomed kidnapping plot in Scribner's provocative first novel, an astute and detailed comment on the American Dream's criminal edge. The narrative traces one hellish weekend in the life of a loving but deluded family, the Wolkoviaks. After the failure of yet another harebrained entrepreneurial scheme, Theo, a chronic screwup, has moved his wife, Colleen, and their whip-smart, anorexic teen daughter, Tiffany, back into the family home with his dad, Malcolm, a retired cop dying from emphysema, and saintly mom. Unbeknownst to Malcolm, who worries endlessly over Theo's future, Theo has cooked up a crazy plan to kidnap Stona Brown, the head of Petrochem (the company that fired Theo before he started his latest doomed business), who lives close by. Coercing Colleen into helping him, Theo plots to keep his victim in a homemade plywood box in a storage locker, and plans to demand an $18-million ransom. But the kidnapping goes wrong from the beginning. Theo accidentally shoots Brown before locking him in the box and neglects to recognize his captive's worsening condition as several days go by. Colleen unravels as the consequences of their act dawn on her, and when Brown dies, she turns on Theo. Meanwhile, Malcolm's stubborn love for his arrogant, incompetent son is heartbreaking, yet his dormant professional instincts slowly waken, and he unwillingly but doggedly leads the investigators, whom he's known for decades, to his own home, and his family's ruin. Scribner based his book on the actual 1992 kidnapping of an Exxon executive in New Jersey, incorporating an effective warning about the narcotic effect of materialism: Theo's enterprises foster his pathetic but unshakable self-confidence, and Colleen dreams of achieving world-class status as a Goodlife products sales rep. Theo and Colleen ring true in their myopic delusions of grandeur, as Scribner perceptively skewers their self-deception, but his talents are most potently displayed in the sensitive portrayals of auxiliary characters like the lovable, wisecracking Tiffany and her conscientious grandpa Malcolm. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

This is a riveting, psychologically sophisticated first novel, based on the actual kidnapping of an Exxon executive in 1992, by an improbable pair of criminalsAa middle-aged, suburban husband and wife who had fallen deeply into debt. The kidnappers, Theo and Colleen Wolkoviak, are skillfully drawn, and they bungle their way to disaster through a mixture of bad judgment, monstrous self-absorption, and a thoroughly misplaced sense of entitlement. Theo is blustery, given to self-aggrandizement, and thoroughly unlikable. Colleen is a willing participant in the crime, but she grows increasingly anxious as complications arise. The story is told from several different points of view, which heightens the tension of the story considerably as we move from Theo, to Colleen, to their victim, who struggles mightily in his captivity with doubts about the women he has loved, the life he has led, and the choices he has made. Recommended for all public libraries.APatrick Sullivan, Manchester Community-Technical Coll., CT
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars The Good Life Feb 24 2004
By A Customer
Format:Mass Market Paperback
"The Goodlife" is a work of fiction. It is very loosely based on the Reso kidnapping of 1992. The histories, characters, settings and motivations,although amusing at times, bear little relationship with the real life of the people involved. Keith Scribner gleaned a few facts from newspaper headlines and created a fast moving imaginary tale which tries, sometimes unsuccessfully, to rise above the meanspiritedness of his descriptions and characterizations. I was disappointed with the author's insensitivity and lack of true research. Read as a novel "The Goodlife," is interesting. It should not be used as an insight into the mind of a criminal or as a social commentary.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Murder most humorous Mar 17 2001
Format:Mass Market Paperback
With homage to "In Cold Blood" and "A Simple Plan" this first effort by Keith Scribner shows maturity and humor beyond its expected scope. Mr. Scribner merges dark humor with sharp social observation and spins a hilarious and chilling look at social dysfunction and ambition, while incorporating a backdrop story of family relationship gone awry. Extremely readable and intelligent, The Goodlife will leave you laughing and thinking. Read it, because you ARE better than other people...
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4.0 out of 5 stars Dreiser Redux Jan 22 2001
Format:Hardcover
Keith Scribner, in his debut novel "The Good Life", does an admirable job with his entry into the American anthology of fictionalized true crime. It's a risky undertaking, attempting to lift sordid truth into inspiring fiction, but Scribner has firm control over his subjects, and injects his ready made plot with keen insight and incisive social commentary.

"The Good Life" is based on a New Jersey kidnapping case from the 1990s, in which a middle aged couple, in a stunning and tremendously incompetent caper, kidapped a highly placed executive at a Fortune 500 firm. It was a cautionary tale of the times, pitting the disappointment and rage of those in American society whose dreams far outstripped their talents, against the smugness and arrogance of those the system rewards.

In Scribner's novel, Theo and Coleen Wolkoviak's lives have evolved into a catalogue of failures. They're unemployed, overdrawn, and living with his father, realizing all the time that they are aging into irrelevance at forty five. The one thing neither of them ever seems short on is fantasy. They've applied their talent for hyperbole and outright fabrication to a great variety of entreprenurial efforts, all to the end of achieving the things that are owed to them. What they "deserve."

Stona Brown is everything they aspire to be. He has arrived in his career, in his marriage, in his own self image. His arrogance knows no bounds, and the sureness of his life, wealth and principles is inviolate. Until one day when his wife spies a strange woman in a pink jogging suit skulking around the foot of the driveway at an odd hour. The ordeal that follows becomes a battle for Stona Brown's life and soul.

The book is a real page turner. Some of the characterizations and language seem stilted and unreal, but as the book unfolds it seems that this is a canny calculation on the author's part--his characters are as bankrupt and empty as the language they think in. Scribner does a great job of buttressing his social exmamination by adopting a writing style which blends right into the lives and the environments he's describing.

Whether or not a reader is familiar with the case on which "A Good Life" is based, it will leave one with a new sense of what is valuable.

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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars A riveting first novel
Theo Wolkoviak is a man who wants nothing more than to provide for his family. Now, heavily in debt and never really being able to provide his family with financial security, he... Read more
Published on Jan 8 2001 by R. Witte
4.0 out of 5 stars A one-sitting read
I also enjoyed this book on one long rainy Sunday and thought that the character of Theo was especially well-developed - you could almost see him pouting at times! Read more
Published on Oct 31 2000 by J. Rivard
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific First Novel
Keith Scribner has written both a psychological drama and a suspense thriller in his first novel. The Goodlife, based on an actual event, begins with the kidnapping of a chemical... Read more
Published on Jun 14 2000 by Roz Levine
3.0 out of 5 stars THE GOODLIFE GONE BAD
This novel is based on the true story of the kidnapping of an Exxon executive in New Jersey. Scribner delves into the minds of Theo and Colleen, the fictional kidnappers, who feel... Read more
Published on Jun 6 2000 by Nancy Martin
5.0 out of 5 stars Deeply Moving
First, two questions: Why do some online reviewers insist on filling their spaces with a novel's entire plot? Read more
Published on May 13 2000
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating read!
I really enjoyed the book. It was well written, with sharp characters. I would be interested in knowing how closely the story is to the real story. Read more
Published on Mar 29 2000
4.0 out of 5 stars No first novel jitters for Scribner
A sophisticated thriller from multiple points of view about failed life plans for victims and perpetrators alike. Read more
Published on Feb 20 2000 by John Prairie
5.0 out of 5 stars Mister Brown - He Dead
This book deserves to be on everyone's "must read" list, including Oprah's. Keith Scribner begins with an ordinary middle-aged suburban couple, Theo and Colleen, who are... Read more
Published on Feb 14 2000 by mrpennysworth
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply could not put this one down....
Every one or two years, I find a book that I read in one sitting. This was one of those rare finds. Read more
Published on Feb 9 2000 by Jonas M. Berwick
4.0 out of 5 stars provides a very entertaining and yet disturbing read
This novel contains well constructed characters and a plot obviously drawn from reality. It provided me with an entertaining read. Read more
Published on Dec 20 1999 by Daniel D. Morton
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