From Publishers Weekly
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From Booklist
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Review
In Lunar Follies, Sorrentino has great fun with a familiar fallacy: if its in an art gallery, it must be significant. Exposed inside each of his rooms is the lunacy of avant-garde artists, curators, critics, and a society that no longer discriminates, in language or presentation of objects, between the extermination of the Jews (Arthur Miller, George Lucas, and Robert Altman smile from the midst of a massive three-dimensional collage, The Holocaust: Years of Hope . . . in Pythagoras), a new class of celebrities and their designer clothing (JINKS MIKADO: Slang collector and recipe verifier; Five-button tortured polyvinyl and wet swansdown jacket, $16,300. At Sabrett and Nathan, in Cordillera Mountains), and football (Walther). Present as well is a great deal of sexual imagery, which by virtue of its plenitude and ubiquitousness in contemporary art works, Sorrentino seems to be saying, has lost its erotic power, flattening photographs, texts, objects and living models into material that verges on pornography.
Blasting and bombarding in highbrow and demotic modes, Lunar Follies is an aesthetic and hilarious delight that often goes right over the edge of correct taste, as illustrated by this sequence of titles taken from Sir Banjo Hyde-Morrisseys private collection of erotica: Warriors Blushingly Confess; Albanian Musician Discovering Yorkshire Pussy; Young Ladies, in Deshabille, Fleeing Albanian Janitors; Serbs Humping Albanian Janitors, or Anybody; African Women Doing Dirty Things with Their Colonialist Oppressors; Burmese Musicians and a Popular Sponge . . . (Moscow Sea). The narrator of Ptolemaeus states that others-happily, the great majority-know that arts function is to disturb, to question, to disgust, to bore, to nauseate . . . , while in Theophilus another confidently says that art is, at its most sublime, simple, decent, and . . . easy on the eyes. Perhaps thinking of reactions to his own works, in Sea of Rains, Sorrentino presents a wall of rejection letters received by a writers agent. One letter, pitched perfectly, addresses a possible reaction to Lunar Follies. Bs latest foray into his standard porno-fiction is often elegant and even beautiful, but it lacks the punch of the short-story collection of his that we passed on last year. Thanks so much for letting me see the work of this important author. Sorrentinos last book, The Moon in Its Flight, was a collection of short stories also published by Coffee House Press (reviewed in these pages in June/July 2004), and its safe to think hes mining his own experiences.
The anger Sorrentino displays in his satire is healthier than depression over the current state of things. Unlike the egoistic pessimism of V.S. Naipaul, who said in 2000 that the novels of that century do not have any lasting power compared to the works of the great novelists in the last century, Sorrentino has a more nuanced view, as expressed in a 1994 interview: . . . the novel is, it seems to me, a very special and rarefied kind of literary form, and was, for a brief moment only, wide-ranging in its sociocultural influence . . . People used to understand, it seems to me, that there is, at any given time, a handful of superb writers or painters or whatever-and then there are all the rest.
In the current literary world, the graphic novel is in fashion as the new black, the blancmange of Alice Munro is touted as the acme of fiction writing by Jonathan Franzen (the new fundamentalist of US letters), the death of the novel is sagely predicted by Naipaul while he writes yet another, and Rushdies novels are spoken of as though they were a release by an amalgam of U2s evangelical protest songs and the inspired madness of Spike Jones and his City Slickers. Lunar Follies is a witty, intelligent and necessarily mean attack on the pretensions and vapidity of everyone and everything connected to facile artworks and the environment in which they flourish.
Jeff Bursey (Books in Canada)
-- Books in Canada
Book Description
“For decades, Gilbert Sorrentino has remained a unique figure in our literature. He reminds us that fiction lives because artists make it. . . . To the novel—everyone’s novel—Sorrentino brings honor, tradition and relentless passion.”—Don DeLillo
“Possessing both the grace of James Joyce and the snap and crackle of Tom Wolfe, [Sorrentino] is a must-read for those who fancy fiction served on wry.”— Booklist
“Far from being overly highbrow, Sorrentino manages to be thrillingly disorienting and, at the same time, quite accessible.”— BookSense.com
“Sorrentino has shown himself a perfect mimic of the information age, an era when all is revealed and no one can quite remember who appeared on the cover of last week’s People .”— The Washington Post
A boyhood friend of the late Hubert Selby, Jr., teacher of Jeffrey Eugenides and two-time PEN/Faulkner Award finalist, Gilbert Sorrentino is an elder statesman of American literature who continues to transgress artistic boundaries.
In Lunar Follies , a bitingly satiric, imaginative tour of gallery, museum and performance art exhibitions, Sorrentino skewers the pretensions of the contemporary art world and its flailing attempts at relevance in a society whose attentions have strayed to the immediacy of pop culture. With precise comedic timing and an eye toward lascivious detail, Sorrentino is the perfect guide through this deliciously absurd world.
Gilbert Sorrentino has published over 20 books of fiction and poetry, including the story collection, The Moon in Its Flight , and the recent novel, Little Casino , which was shortlisted for the 2003 PEN/Faulkner Award. After two decades on the faculty at Stanford University, he now lives in his native Brooklyn, New York.