SHADOWED HISTORY
Here's to good, but not great, first fiction.
October 4th, 2006
The Littlest Hitler | Seattle author takes a hilarious bite outta Left Coast suburbia.0 comments
September 6th, 2006
The Traveling Death And Resurrection Show | Portlander's debut novel shows promise, talent but falters.1 comment
August 16th, 2006
THE THINGS BETWEEN US | Between Lee Montgomery and her memoir lies only self-pity.7 comments
August 2nd, 2006
The Cantor's Daughter | When emotions are fragile, Scott Nadelson pushes them to the breaking point.0 comments
July 19th, 2006
Last Week's Apocalypse | Portlander Douglas Lain slings shovel-loads from our national midden.0 comments
July 12th, 2006
A Sense Of The World | A tour de force biography of a man who led the way in every sense but sight.0 comments
July 5th, 2006
The Whole World Over | Julia Glass' sophomore effort proves her 2002 National Book Award was no fluke.0 comments
June 28th, 2006
Girls In Peril1 comment
June 7th, 2006
Literary Threesome | A triple threat against the usual, boring beach book.0 comments
May 31st, 2006
The Unsettling: Stories By Peter Rock | A Reed College professor mines Portland's landscape for chills.0 comments
![]() Sam Brumbaugh |
[June 29th, 2005] Fiction that strives to do more than tell a good story reeks like perfume on a perfidious man. When one sets out to write the great American or social or feminist or whatever novel, the story is often sacrificed for the political statement. That's the effect of Sam Brumbaugh's ambitious debut novel, Goodbye, Goodness, which, at its best, paints wildly engaging characters alienated by a mediated and medicated world. At its worst, though, the novel segues from the tragic story at its center to make that dreaded larger point. The substory here concerns the narrator's great-great grandmother, Annie Oakley, and the larger point has something to do with the lie of the American dream.
The novel begins with the narrator, Hayward Theiss, recovering from a car accident in an empty Malibu beach house. He spends weeks hiding and recalling moments of his life, as revealed through an amnesiac fog. These stories combine to tell a harrowing tale of Theiss' battles with depression, deception and drugs as he loses his career in television and his girl. In the course of his recovery, the story bounces back and forth from Malibu to Georgetown and all over Theiss' personal chronology.
It's a bit of a jumble, but Brumbaugh's storytelling is refreshing, skirting the sensationalism of drug lit and painting the novel's other two main characters with revealing detail: Will, an impulsive arts journalist, and Kimmel, a difficult musician. But just when, for instance, Will's apathy toward the world of publishing begins to reveal itself as something deeper, Brumbaugh thrusts the reader, once again, back into the late 19th century as Annie Oakley watches her world deteriorate. And suddenly Will's story looks like a carbon copy of the traditional lost-dreams novel. That might be what Brumbaugh intended, but it still overshadows the story.
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