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L.I.E.
 
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L.I.E. (Paperback)

by David Hollander (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 19.95
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From Publishers Weekly

Dissolution, love and sexual frustration are the driving themes of this debut novel, set on blue-collar Long Island, or "Wrong Island," as its denizens here refer to it. Spanning the last two years of the '80s amid several dead-end towns in Suffolk County, the novel disjointedly follows the painful maturation of Harlan Kessler, a long-haired, guitar-picking 18-year-old who's searching for his life's direction but would settle for losing his virginity. A hilarious opening sequence sets the stage for his fragmented, slapstick journey: the moment before Harlan rids himself of his innocence, his entire family walks in on the teen couple en flagrante. The plot expands to include Harlan's scary brothers and adulterous parents, his loser friends and their dysfunctional families. Harlan's pal, drummer Todd Slatsky, has wild parties at which he plays home movies featuring his father beating up his mother. Harlan's eventual romantic interest, Sarah, is terrified of her mother's new husband, a sleazy coke dealer who supplies the drugs that fuel the mental breakdown of Harlan's friend Beedy. Harlan is the center of this series of increasingly odd episodes, which progress from the depressingly plausible sexual bunglings to scenes of death, destruction and depravity. In an utterly bizarre one-act play set in the middle of the book, the fragmentation of Harlan's brain mirrors the disintegration of his family. The story of Harlan's sad life is rife with the wry asides, ironic italics and narrative tricks much better left to the skills of Dave Eggers, and the novel's conclusion is deeply, unsatisfyingly ambiguous. Hollander's debut is set against a backdrop so bleak that it undermines his otherwise formidable talent for tragic irony and cinematic vision.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Library Journal

A male coming-of-age novel isn't all that rare, but we don't often find one that presents its main character's growing maturity with such insight and sensitivity. At the onset, protagonist Harlan Kessler is in high school on Long Island in the 1980s (the eponymous L.I.E. stands for Long Island Expressway), where his concerns are limited to sports and losing his virginity. In the early chapters, Hollander makes liberal use of italics to demonstrate youthful exuberance, but his narrative voice quickly sobers as Harlan stumbles his way into adulthood. Harlan's middle-class Long Island is an American dream gone wrongDan endless sprawl of bedroom communities populated with disconnected people. Harlan sees his friends scatter or get caught up in drugs, suicide, or dead-end jobs. Meanwhile, he pins his hopes on a rock guitarist career, a choice destined to keep him stuck in his job as an IRS clerk. Hollander experiments with some stylistic tricks and in the end waxes surrealistic, but the novel's true strength is its realistic depiction of hollow, suburban life. Highly recommended for first-novel collections.
-DReba Leiding, James Madison Univ., Harrisonburg, VA
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (5)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
2.0 out of 5 stars LIE a novel, Mar 23 2003
By A Customer
Nothing is more disappointing in a novel than finding it derivative. Unfortunately this is what LIE is and nothing more. If fiction is a horizon of expection, than LIE does little more than move our narrative hopes in concetric circles. You get the impression, reading Mr. Hollander's novel, that he is pasting together all the trite literary techniques that he was taught at Sarah Lawrence. Pastiche, when not in the hands of a virtuoso, is just pat repitition. Mr. Hollander is no virtuoso; LIE, no masterpiece of reiteration.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Who cares?, Feb 10 2002
By "jam83b" (Bellport Long Island) - See all my reviews
This review is from: L.I.E.: A Novel (Hardcover)
This review is more of a comment about some of the other reviews. First off, the L.I.E. is not the dividing line of Long Island. Most of the time you do not even think about it unless you are on it. Saying that the L.I.E. should have been referenced more along the lines of splitting the North Shore from the South has no relevance to reality. The L.I.E., in this story was used just as a physical metaphor. Also, stating that the Little Neck parkway does not separate Queens from Nassau is not helpful in a review. Who cares? It is close enough, and in fact Little Neck Parkway starts at Jamaica Avenue, this has no relevance to the story. I was in charge of the golf carts at the Bellport Golf Course (in reality the Bellport Country Club) and I can tell you that Harlan's brother could not have used them to hide behind on Halloween because they are locked up behind a fence. That could not have happened and guess what? That is why they call it fiction. Read the book it is good.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Is it real...?, Jan 21 2002
By Reviewer "Reviewer" (Worthington, OH USA) - See all my reviews
I'd been carrying the electronic version of this book around on my PocketPC for months and finally got around to starting it a few weeks ago. I was instantly hooked! The collection of stories in this book, though linked together, all stand on their own as fine pieces of work. Hollander has a definite narrative voice that runs throughout all of the stories. At the same time, the style of most stories here are unique and quite different from one another. Some of the stories are totally surreal, and others point out just how surreal "real", everyday life can be. Hope to see much more from this author in the future.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Experiments in Form
I came across this book accidentally in a used book store, and I'll admit it, I liked the cover and the flap copy. But it's a really cool book. Read more
Published on Sep 26 2001

3.0 out of 5 stars On the road to nowhere
Basically, this novel is a stream of related short stories, and they get more and more metaphysical. Read more
Published on Jul 5 2001 by Richard LeComte

2.0 out of 5 stars Does metafiction exist?
Were it a bit more traditionally presented, I'd say this was an interesting idea that somehow missed the mark. Read more
Published on Nov 7 2000 by T. Rorapaugh

5.0 out of 5 stars A fantastic book!
This is such a great book! I was surprised to find that it is hysterically funny; Hollander has a real gift to talk about very serious issues with a good dose of humor. Read more
Published on Oct 21 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars A Philosophical Edge
This is a great collection of interlocking stories. On the one hand, it is about suburban, post-industrial society. Read more
Published on Oct 12 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars No One
No one gets this book. Yea, it's lagging autisticly at certain points, but there's this weird sense I huv of being watched by something when I read it. Read more
Published on Oct 10 2000 by A. Nlocnil

2.0 out of 5 stars Nice Attempt but Naive and Cliche
As a youth living on Long Island, I can often understand Hollander's ambition to write about the suburbs and how "wierd" it supposely is. Read more
Published on Sep 28 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars praise for L.I.E.
"[An] engaging debut . . . equal parts bleak travelogue and surreal daydream . . . If we feel we've heard enough about the land at malls and clover leafs, we're wrong; it's... Read more
Published on Sep 20 2000

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