The reviewer of books reviewed
I know exactly how many of you feel when someone comments on your writing that gets posted here. We are not typing these words into a computer screen, but into some reader’s imagination, and maybe heart and mind. We never really know how it will be received until we get feedback, and that feedback can either feed or diminish our worst fears or our greatest expectations. Monika Spykerman was good enough to read and review our debut novel, The Boy with a Torn Hat.
Here is what she has to say:
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Review of “The Boy with the Torn Hat” by Thornton Sully
by Monika Spykerman
Thornton Sully’s third novel has been described as a coming-of-age story, but this isn’t entirely accurate. It’s less about a boy becoming a man and more about a man learning to see the truth in himself and others – that imperfection can be beautiful.
The novel is set in 1970s Heidelberg, where the protagonist, Morgan, spends his days applying paint to either houses or canvas, and his nights painting the town red. His compatriots are a polyglot mix of singers, painters, musicians and devoted drinkers. They make a living mainly on the streets – exchanging art for “geld” (that’s money, if you nicht sprechen deutsch) and spend their proceeds mainly in the pubs. You’ll meet The Sassy Waitress, The Prickly but Passionate Prostitute, The Unattainable Woman, The Naughty Student, The Soulful Irishman (who bears the preposterously allusive name Jimmy Joyce) – and Morgan himself, The Struggling Artist. There are unexpected characters: a guitar, and the city of Heidelberg itself. If ever there was a love song written for a city, this book is it.
Sully is true to the times, with a surplus of sex, a deluge of bier, and a helping of civil unrest. He serves us a bubbling steinful of love, both unrequited and requited, topped with a frothy dollop of lust. For some, that’s enough to recommend the novel – but beneath the flirtatious banter and the veritable fountainhead of double-entendres, there’s a deeper vein of gold to be mined. If you’ve ever wondered why some artists fail and others succeed, Sully puts forth a hypothesis worth examining. What’s the secret alchemical formula that transforms paint, brushes, canvas, clay, words, notes, voices, instruments into Art? How do artists reconfigure the flawed beauty around us into a vision of perfection? Are artists merely conduits whose sole task – or soul task, if you will – is to make themselves hollow so that beauty can shine through? The Philosopher’s Stone – the mythical substance that turns base materials into gold – might just be the artist.
Sully follows Morgan down his rocky path of self-discovery, and you’ll want to tag along, not least to know whether he Gets the Girl – or gets something completely unexpected. Most of all, you’ll want to walk with Morgan up the hallowed steps of the Philosopher’s Way, and see through his eyes as he realizes that beauty is truth, and truth, beauty.
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Proceeds from the sale of The Boy with a Torn Hat help fund this website, and look very cool in your hands sitting at a coffee shop. You can buy a boy to call your own from the author’s limited signed edition by clicking www.awordwithyoupress.com/buy/
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