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Purple America: A Novel
 
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Purple America: A Novel (Paperback)

by Rick Moody (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 19.95
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From Amazon.com

Purple America begins in a bathtub and ends in Long Island Sound. In between, Rick Moody's latest novel explores the landscape of a family in crisis. Dexter (Hex) Raitliffe, a freelance publicist, returns home to care for his mother, Billie, who is dying by inches of a neurological disease that will rob her of motion, of speech, and finally of thought. Billie's second husband has left her--a fact that Hex is unaware of until he comes home--and her only hope for assisted suicide lies in her son. Unfortunately, Hex is barely able to conduct his own life, much less take his mother's. Purple America takes place over the course of a single night; in that night, Hex gives his mother a bath, reconnects with an old love, gets drunk, and goes after his stepfather to confront him, with tragic results.

As Moody weaves his tale of this fateful Friday evening, he juxtaposes themes of aging, obsolescence, and physical decline with an accident at the nuclear power plant where his stepfather works. What lifts this novel above its rather depressing subject matter is Moody's unsentimental storytelling and the soaring language with which he gives his characters voice. Purple America is by turns lyrical, tragic, ferocious, and funny, and Rick Moody is a writer with a brilliant future ahead of him. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Library Journal

The explosive cleavage of the atom and its attendant fallout provide the arch-metaphor for Moody's third novel. Billie Raitliffe, of Fenwick, Connecticut, suffers from a paralyzing neuralgic disorder and cannot care for herself. Younger husband Lou Sloane, a nuclear plant manager, has moved out, so she calls on her middle-aged, alcoholic son Dexter (Hex). The specter of Hex's father, a Manhattan Project scientist who died of radiation poisoning, hovers perceptibly over the proceedings. In a 36-hour span, Billie is injured, Hex consummates a lingering high school crush in a bizarre fashion, and Lou presides over a nuclear emergency the day of his forced early retirement. The events do not occur discretely but are part of a chain reaction Moody engineers in an atomic experiment. He renders his findings in vivid, intense, and often unpleasant detail, effectively reviving the nuclear threat and limning its symbolic and etymological resonance with domestic breakdown (half-life, decay) without denying the humanity of the characters or the centrality of the story. Despite the occasionally overwrought prose, Moody has redrawn the suburban landscape, as defined by Updike and Cheever. Fans of both will want to discover this new country.?Adam Mazmanian, "Library Journal"
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (10)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant. Funny. Heartbreaking., Jan 5 2004
By A Customer
This is the most complete, nuanced, and beautiful work I've read by Rick Moody. It's jammed with his witty observations, scathing cynicism, and ironic beauty, and it's a great introduction to his memorable character development and unique writing style.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Moving tale, magnificent writing, Jun 16 2003
By Dan Witte (Forest Park, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This is the first Rick Moody book I have ever read, and based on what I'd heard about his style, I was prepared for some unconventional narrative structure. As it turns out, the only thing that's unconventional in this book is the lack of quotation marks around dialogue. Otherwise, this is some exceptionally strong story telling, employing all of the components of satisfying literature (conflict, crisis, resolution, character transformation) and some really creative, insightful writing. Moody has a unique narrative voice, to be sure, but it's far from being obtuse or inaccessible; it's more like painful interior dialogue, rendered in emotions and impressions that are simultaneously universal and foreign.

There are two thematic backdrops that reinforce what is basically a story about disintegration: nuclear crisis (as experienced by the main character's deceased father and present day stepfather) and degenerative disease (as experienced by the main character's mother). Hex Raitliffe, the troubled, stuttering son summoned home to "assist" his mother, is in a degenerative state himself, and in the course of a day (the time period covered in the book) manages to bed his childhood crush, confront his runaway stepfather, get into a fistfight, blow up his rental car, and kill his mother -- or maybe he doesn't. I don't want to give away the last act.

Tortured though he is, there is something positive and redeeming in Hex Raitliffe, and he manages eventually to bring out the best in almost everyone he encounters. I found all of the characters believable, but especially Hex, who Moody brings to exquisite and poignant life. His crises are ours, and in the end he reaches a conclusion most any of us would, even if we wouldn't necessarily follow the same path to get there. What made this book work for me was the vicarious adventure I experienced following his path.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Moments of Brilliance, Oct 2 2001
This is one of the most touching books I've ever read. If you want to know what it's like to live in suburbia, this would be a good start (also check out Davit Leavitt's Family Dancing). Rick Moody is a master stylist, rivaled only by E. Annie Proulx and Michael Ondaatje. All the characters in this book are refreshingly original; there are no heroes and no villains. Rick Moody delights in vivid imagery and clever metaphors (concerning a hamburger, "it's rareness almost an emergency, crimson and raw like a splatter wound"). There are moments of brilliant writing unmatched by any living writer. Don't miss the shocking ending. Could've worked without the techno babble about nuclear plants, and the only weak character is Louis the stepfather. But this is the greatest perfect imperfect book. Skip the potboilers and see what contemporary fiction is all about.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Well-crafted, deliberate prose
Moody's prose reminds me more of old-timers like Updike, Steinbeck, and Salinger, than of his contemporaries. Why? Read more
Published on Sep 26 2001 by Jake Mohan

4.0 out of 5 stars Death of the nuclear family
The chronicle of the last days of a (literally) nuclear family-- _Purple America_ begins when Hex, the stuttering alcoholic son of the house, returns to find that his... Read more
Published on Aug 26 2001 by C. Gilbert

5.0 out of 5 stars absolutely beautiful
I don't know how people could have found this boring. But everyone is built differently, I guess.

I found the lyricism of his writing deeply moving. Read more

Published on Aug 22 2001 by hairpin

4.0 out of 5 stars America in Decline?
In following Hex Raitliffe and his distressed family through the course of one weekend, Rick Moody takes a slice of middle class suburbia and slides it, this microcosm of American... Read more
Published on May 3 2001 by Stephen Capadona

4.0 out of 5 stars Decay in the American Family
Purple America is an impressive book because of the many problems of American life that it takes on. Read more
Published on April 19 2001 by Mike A. Swofford Jr.

4.0 out of 5 stars Purple America, Lyrical and Heart-felt
Purple America is not the ordinary novel that you might be used to. It is by far one of the most beautifully written novels I have ever read. Read more
Published on April 18 2001 by Matthew McGaughy

4.0 out of 5 stars Complex and Moving
Like his earlier work The Ice Storm, Moody has again peeled back the layers of a dysfunctional Connecticut family in the suburbs to reveal the dark, inner-most underside of their... Read more
Published on Jan 18 2001 by J. Mullin

1.0 out of 5 stars Unreadable
Rick Moody, Purple America (Back Bay Books, 1997)

When Rick Moody released The Ice Storm a few years back, he was heralded as the next big thing in the publishing business... Read more

Published on Jan 16 2001 by Robert P. Beveridge

4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating Look at Modern America
While the narrative events in Purple America may take place in less than a day, the past weighs heavily on the characters and sometimes turns the narrative in on itself. Read more
Published on Dec 10 2000 by Laurie D. T. Mann

5.0 out of 5 stars I think some people miss the point on this one...
... the language is tricky at times, and he likes to get into those categorical lists, which may come across as tangential wandering, but to me its quite brilliant. Read more
Published on May 23 2000 by Joshua S. Levy

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