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The Boomer
 
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The Boomer (Hardcover)

by Marty Asher (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 22.50
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Tracing the life of his protagonist, identified as "the boomer," from birth to death in childlike, "see Spot run" prose, Vintage Books editor-in-chief Asher delivers a spare outline of one man's life, which nevertheless manages to capture many boomer-generation milestones and anxieties with winning pathos. Divided into 100 paragraph-long chapters, the book is illustrated with clever clip art and '50s-style graphics that counterpoint the events experienced by the unnamed boomer. The facile childhood chapters describe school, vacation, homelife and even the boy's favorite lunch. But soon, with adolescence, the boomer's world becomes more complicated, and the rudimentary prose takes on a more satiric note. Leaving his unhappy family for college, the boomer enjoys sex, drugs and independence. Then simple pleasures soon give way to the responsibilities of adult life: "The boomer graduated with honors. He got a good job in a large company. He rented a small walk-up apartment. A woman gave him a cat." The boomer eventually marries this woman, and when she has a son, he decides to love his wife. The family accumulates material goods, and acquires a soon to be beloved dog, as the boomer gets steadily promoted at his job. The boomer's son goes to college and tells his father that he's gay, the dog dies, the boomer enters a serious depression and gets into a car accident. Life is not quite the same after that, and the confused boomer moves in with another woman during his midlife crisis. The narrative maintains its deadpan tone throughout, summarily stylizing the character's life into flat, expository pantomime, but the implications are unmistakable. The boomer emerges as a sympathetic character who lived through '50s conformism, late-'60s rebellion, '70s aimlessness, '80s consumerism and beyond, and his death has full emotional impact. Asher's protagonist is sure to remind America's largest demographic of someone they know very well. Illus. from the CSA Archives, augmented by Chip Kidd. QPB alternate. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal

The editor-in-chief of Vintage Books takes on the baby boomers as they drift to the far reaches of middle age.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Melancholy Tale, Mar 6 2004
By Timothy Walker (Orlando, Florida USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The Boomer is the story of the everyman, living an ordinary (if empty) American life. In 101 concise Zen-like paragraphs, punctuated with kitschy illustrations, Marty Asher forces us to think about the hardest of all questions: namely, what makes life worth living? That the author is able to accomplish this with such brevity suggests that this book is less a novel, and more a work of art, which I highly recommend.

Several other reviewers have called this book depressing; I respectfully disagree. A good story is like a mirror, and what you read into it may simply be a reflection. The moral of this story, if there is one, may be to stop and smell the roses... or, in the more poignant words of the author, to learn to love in an easy, natural way. Unlike the boomer, it's not too late for you.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Stick your head in an oven after reading it, Oct 15 2002
By Mott Given (Columbus, Ohio USA) - See all my reviews
A good book but you'll feel like sticking your head in an oven after reading it. I found it looking for all the books in my local library in the category "Experimental Fiction." It has a drawing on almost every page to accompany the text. It is the pessimistic story of a boomer's life from birth to death, as the protagonist struggles through life's stages in a fruitless pursuit of happiness. Its kind of cynical and reminds me of the thinking of my father's generation (survivors of the Depression and veterans of World War II). Its a small format with few pages and is a very quick read.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A tiny vortex, Sep 26 2000
I picked this up at the library, curious not because I'm a boomer but because my father is, and read it on the subway ride home. No book, no film, no artifice has ever left me feeling as disconsolate and crushed as The Boomer. The lesson, as I interpreted it, is this: Prolonged happiness is impossible, since success is empty, love fails you, and you can't outrun your growing capacity for pleasure and acquisition. I think cars are the only things in this book that are given names.

I can't articulate a rating for The Boomer. Three stars is an arbitrary selection. It affected me -- it wounded my interior. I see my father in it, and I know that he would see himself, and yet he has never cautioned me (as the book does not caution) against absorbing the disconnective malaise of his life. Sending him this book would be an act of terrorism.

On the subway ride home: how easy it was to read something so hard.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A Book for All of Us
Marty Asher has produced a compelling book of 101 paragraph-length chapters which chronicles the life of what we assume to be a typical man of his times - a Boomer. Read more
Published on Jun 22 2000 by saintjerome

5.0 out of 5 stars the boomer and marty asher the man
As member of Generation Y (maybe, my apathetic generation is more aptly termed Generation Why?), I might not seem like the target customer for a book about baby boomers. Read more
Published on Jun 22 2000 by Alex Madrigal

3.0 out of 5 stars Short and Interesting
I saw this book in Tower Records and Books and picked it up. It was so small that it struck me as interesting. Well, I read it in about 10 minutes in the book section. Read more
Published on Jun 10 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Remembrance of Things Past!
As I finished The Boomer by Marty Asher last night I sensed that this book was one which would keep me thinking for some time to come. Read more
Published on Jun 8 2000 by Nancy R. Katz

5.0 out of 5 stars This book stays with you after you close its covers
Something about this book is chilling, haunting, funny, sarcastic, surreal and enlightning. Here is this book that seems to put the american dream on trial. Read more
Published on Jun 3 2000 by Ahmad Jordan

3.0 out of 5 stars The Boomer.....Like a puppy
How can a novel titled "The Boomer" purport any mimetical validity when it totally ignores the once-daunting spectre of Vietnam, a defining shadow that fell in some way... Read more
Published on May 24 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Zings It Home
Asher does it again. In 30 minutes, he took me up to the mirror, showed me where I came from, where I am, and where my life would probably go. Read more
Published on May 19 2000 by Allen Hollander

5.0 out of 5 stars A Gem!
This book is a gem! Reminiscent in form of Ken Sparling's "Dad Says He Saw You At The Mall," this eentsy novel is the newest contribution to the genre known as... Read more
Published on May 19 2000 by Laurel Hall

5.0 out of 5 stars The Boomer
In 101 tiny chapters of 4-5 sentences each, we follow the quintessential baby boomer from birth to death through childhood pranks, to college experimentation, success as a... Read more
Published on May 13 2000 by Ricki Nordmeyer

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