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Memory Of The Running
 
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Memory Of The Running (Paperback)

by Ron Mclarty (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Amazon.com

Ron McLarty has joined the ranks of writers of the quirky hero with The Memory of Running. His hero, Smithy Ide, is in the grand tradition of Ignatius J. Reilly of A Confederacy of Dunces and Quoyle of The Shipping News. What these gentlemen have in common is their lumpen-loser looks, their outsider status and their general befuddlement about the way the world works and their place in it. Smithy rises above them because of his self-effacing nature, his great capacity for love, his inability to show it and his endless willingness to forgive.

Smithy is a 279-pound, hard-drinking, chain-smoking, 43-year-old misfit who works in a G.I. Joe factory putting arms and legs on the action heroes. (How did McLarty come up with that?) He is also the most beguiling anti-hero to come into view in a long, long time. McLarty, an award-winning actor and playwright best known for his many appearances on TV in Law & Order, Sex and the City, The Practice, and Judging Amy, has added another star to his creative crown with this novel.

The first sentence of the book is: "My parents' Ford station wagon hit a concrete divider on U.S. 95 outside Biddeford, Maine, in August 1990." This tragic accident eventually claims both their lives. It is on the day of their funeral that Smithy finds a letter to his father about Bethany, his beloved and deeply troubled sister, stating that, "Bethany Ide, 51, died from complications of exposure... and she has since that time been in the Los Angeles Morgue West." Beautiful Bethany, given to taking off her clothes in public places, holding impossible poses for long periods of time, responding to voices that only she can hear, and disappearing for no known reason. This time, she has been gone for many years and now Smithy knows that she died destitute and alone. When he reads the letter, he is drunk, grief-stricken and, despite a house full of people, he is alone. He goes out to the garage to smoke and have another drink and spies his old Raleigh bicycle. He sits on it, flat tires and all, wheels it to the end of the driveway--and--Smithy doesn’t know it yet, but he is going to ride a bicycle from Maine to Los Angeles to claim his sister's remains.

On the road he meets the good, the bad, and the really bad. He frequently calls Norma, the Ides' across-the-street neighbor, confined to a wheelchair for years, and always in love with him. He has never acknowledged nor returned her ardor, but he starts to count on her friendship during his travels. Their conversations are sweet and revelatory. McLarty has done a superb job of showing us who Smithy is and who he is becoming. It's a wonderful story told with great poignancy and humor. --Valerie Ryan --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

Smithy Ide is a really nice guy. But he's also an overweight, friendless, womanless, hard-drinking, 43-year-old self-professed loser with a breast fetish and a dead-end job, given to stammering "I just don't know" in life's confusing moments. When Smithy's entire family dies, he embarks on a transcontinental bicycle trip to recover his sister's body and rediscover what it means to live. Along the way, he flashes back to his past and the hardships of his beloved sister's schizophrenia, while his dejection encourages strangers to share their life stories. The road redeems the innocent Smithy: he loses weight; rescues a child from a blizzard; rebuffs the advances of a nubile, "apple-breasted" co-cyclist after seeing a vision of his dead sister; and nurtures a telephone romance with a paraplegic family friend as he processes his rocky past. McLarty, a playwright and television actor, propels the plot with glib mayhem—including three tragic car accidents in 31 pages and a death by lightning bolt—and a lot of bighearted and warm but faintly mournful humor. It's a funny, poignant, slightly gawky debut that aims, like its protagonist, to please—and usually does.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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8 Reviews
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5.0 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Review Of "The Memory Of Running" by Ron McLarty, Feb 14 2006
By Jody Cairns "Steel White Table" (NB, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This excellent novel reminded me of The Lovely Bones, although it's completely different. Both start with death, with the protagonist working through their family and themselves dealing with it, then closure at the end of the story; however, The Lovely Bones' protagonist is a dead 14 year old. The Memory Of Running's protagonist is a chain-smoking, forty-three year old alcoholic with no life:

"...people tended to form quick opinions of me when I stood there fat and drunk and cigarette-stained in front of them. Even reasonable people go for an immediate response. Drunk. Fat. A smoky-burned aroma."

He rides across America on a bicycle, trying to come to terms with his life: his insane sister, dead parents, regrets, and how he got where he is. It's a painful ride at first (physically and emotionally), but his telling of his past and the people he meets on his journey helps him survive the journey. I'm making it sound sappy, but it isn't. The guy is a little nuts, but he has a great story to tell.

The author writes well, making you feel not only for the main character, but everyone he writes about. He hits home sometimes:

"You have to learn to look at someone you truly adore through eyes that really aren't your own. It's as if a person has to become another person altogether to be able to take a hard look. Good people protect people they love, even if that means pretending that everything is okay."

Or:

"...I was a loner who wished not to be alone. It's something I have thought about and thought about, and I now feel that at any given time there are a lot of lonely loners out there. We just don't understand the process of making some friends. The complicated format of friendship. It's not easy."

Yeah, people who know me can see why those struck home, but don't let my admiration dissuade you: this is a funny, touching novel. It isn't a work of literature with a capital "L"; it's a good novel. It'll make you laugh, might make you cry, make you empathetic for the characters, and reminiscent about your past and life, giving you something to think about, although not in a deep way. You'll smile when you put the book down after reading a chapter or two. He tells a good story.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Sensational, Feb 18 2005
By Pius (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Memory Of Running (Hardcover)
We always run, run for something, to something away from something, away from someone, to someone, for someone. Running has a purpose. It is well depicted in this book. In The Memory of Running we are introduced to a fantastic journey across America and the life of Smithy Idea, a fat loser with a kindly temperament. With great narrative skills, the author only brings out a great story, with a simplistic, yet rich plot, the author also brought to live a remarkable character we all can identify with. Smith loses the family and tries to come to terms with the loss by journeying through America. Besides Smith, the other characters are brought to life with deep, brilliant, sweet and sometimes bittersweet tones. I am certain you will learn something about yourself after reading this book and trying to identify with Smithy. After all, he is a remarkable character who realized his place, and did his best despite his imperfections. In the end, he acted his destiny.

Also recommended: DISCIPLES OF FPRTUNE, THE USURPER AND OTHERS, DON QUIXOTE

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5.0 out of 5 stars An audio I'll listen to again and again, Jun 11 2004
Stephen King personally insisted that I read this book (okay, he recommended it to me AND thousands of others in an Entertainment Weekly column) so here I am. His write up was so enthusiastic that I couldn't resist. And I'm glad I didn't.
The Memory of Running is the story of Smithson Ide, your everyday boy next door growing up in New England during the 60's. The story is told in a series of flashbacks and narrated by 40something Smithy.

Smithy's sister Bethany constantly told him to keep running or he'd turn into a fat ass and she wasn't kidding. Smithy has grown from a slender boy who loved to run into an overweight, junk eating, chain-smoking laze-about with little ambition and a great fondness for the television set. He lives a monotonous, shut-in sort of life but has managed to maintain an aura of sweetness and innocence when, as we learn more of his past, he could've easily become jaded and bitter. When his parents tragically die he revisits his past, rekindles a friendship with a long neglected friend and hops on a bicycle in his funeral suit (!) to work through his grief. During his trip from Rhode Island to California he meets all sorts of fascinating people with stories to tell and recounts his very interesting and often heartbreaking past.

The story starts a bit slowly but quickly picks up pace. As it went on I found myself making excuses to stay in the car or take a longer route home so I hear just a few more words. Smithy grew up with an older sister, Bethany, who he, his mom and his pop loved very much. Bethany was beautiful and smart but began to hear "voices" as a young teen. The "voice" makes Bethany do bizarre; out of character, shameful things like strip her clothes in public, tear at her pretty face, stand in odd poses for hours on end and disappear. Smithy spends much of his childhood biking around looking for Bethany and hates Bethany's "voice" though he always continues to love Bethany even when she's cruel.

The story flips between Smithy's current day wonderings where he meets all sorts of folks and has some downright odd encounters and flashes back to his past where he goes into detail about important points in his young life; from dating foibles, to the fateful day when a childhood friend's vibrant personality was forever changed and he details many of Bethany's "episodes" which had a huge impact on his young life. You really get to know these folks in the span of this book and I was sorry to let them go when I finished.

The story it isn't always perfect (some of the dialogue feels unreal and the story shifts are sometimes too abrupt for my liking) but despite the minor quibbles it is one of the most involving things I've read in quite a while and author McLarty's narration is seamlessly performed. Filled with unexpected twists, beautifully detailed settings and a gut wrenching sense of emotional intensity The Memory of Running is a book I'll be revisiting many times.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Two Thumbs Up as a Good Book
My wife and I read the same books and compare our thoughts. Usually it amounts to her saying my ideas are stupid or me saying something of equal happiness to her, but it's all in... Read more
Published on Jul 13 2005 by NM Acoba

5.0 out of 5 stars I'm a Ron McLarty fan...
He's entertained me so often with his melodious voice on Recorded Books, Inc. tapes of great literature, and now I got a chance to hear him read his own work, which was a delight... Read more
Published on Mar 15 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Finding yourself
Great read! Brings you back in touch with yourself and your soul... the way we ought to be.
Published on Mar 11 2004 by Julie A. Shellberg

5.0 out of 5 stars Come take a ride with a master narrator and author
Coming soon to print near you (see the review about Steven King's reccomendation)is a very enjoyable ride across the country with Smithson Ide. Read more
Published on Feb 22 2004 by twrfan

5.0 out of 5 stars I disagree with Stephen King-this is a Huckleberry Finn
Smithy Ide's journey through the 60's to the 90's is a close to a Huckleberry Finn of my generation as I've found-on a par with King's masterpeice (in my eyes) Hearts in Atlantis... Read more
Published on Feb 17 2004 by Samuel L. Kent

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