Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
February 27, 2012
Unfolding over the course of one Thanksgiving Day, Fountain’s (Brief Encounters with Che Guevara) second novel follows Bravo Company, the eight survivors of a savage clash with Iraqi insurgents, on the last leg of their government-sponsored “Victory Tour” in this witty and ironic sendup of middle America, Fox News politics, and, of all things, football. One minute, the soldiers are drinking Jack and Cokes, mobbed by hordes of well-wishers demanding autographs and seeking “the truth” about what’s “really going on” over there; the next, they’re in the bowels of Texas Stadium, reluctantly hobnobbing with the Dallas Cowboys and their cheerleaders, brokering a movie deal with a smarmy Hollywood producer, and getting into a drunken scuffle with the stadium’s disgruntled road crew, all in a series of uncomfortable scenes that border on the farcical. Texan Billy Lynn is the 19-year-old hero who learns about life and himself on his visit home to his family, and the palpable camaraderie between soldiers ground the book. But despite much valid pontificating on what it means to be a soldier and the chasm that exists between the American public’s perception of the war and the blunt reality of it, the often campy writing style and canned dialogue (“We, like, we wanna do somethin’ like you. Extreme, you know, cap some Muslim freaks...”) prevents the message from being delivered effectively. Agent: Heather Schroder, ICM.
A group of American soldiers is being honored for their service, in particular, for surviving a ferocious firefight in Iraq, with a half-time ceremony at a Dallas Cowboys game. They meet the owner, the cheerleaders, and all manner of fans who profess their admiration. Specialist Billy Lynn, though, has questions. And doubts. Over the course of the book he gets a crash course on what it means to be an American, a soldier, and a brother. Narrator Oliver Wyman gives this book the depth and emotional heft it deserves. His understated, deliberate reading propels the story forward, and his scratchy voice perfectly captures the hope and loss inherent in the story. His characters range from straightforward to embellished, a range that seems to be what the author intends. R.I.G. © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine
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