|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
Metropolitan Life
| Article
# : |
17673 |
|
|
Section : |
BOOK WORLD
|
| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1990 |
3,368 Words |
| Author
: |
Bruce Bawer Bruce Bawer is the author of Diminishing Fictions: Essays on
the Modern American Novel and Its Critics (Graywolf Press). He
has three books forthcoming in 1992: Prophets and Professors,
a collection of essays on modern poetry and its critics; The
Screenplay's the Thing, a compilation of pieces about films,
and Coast to Coast, a volume of poetry. |
LEAP YEAR
Peter Cameron
New York: Harper & Row, 1990
245 pp., $18.95
Whatever happened to the Literary Brat Pack? A few years ago, this circle of young novelists and short-story writers seemed to be on the verge of dominating the American literary landscape. And no wonder: From the moment their books and stories began to appear, it was obvious that their flat, affectless narratives - populated, as they were, by baby-boom protagonists and by their friends, lovers, siblings, and parents, and crowded with the names of movies, TV game shows, popular songs, and various upscale consumer items - were tailor-made to appeal to the superficial yuppie sensibility of the 1980s. In one yarn after another, the Literary Brat Packers put heir mostly upper-middle-class, suburban-reared heroes through familiar baby-boom paces: They began lives in their own in the big city (usually New York), working in publishing houses or second-hand clothing stores; they had colorful, frustrating love affairs (invariably with other upper-middle-class, suburban-reared baby-boomers); they came out of the closet to their families; they watched their aging mothers divorce or come down with cancer or die.
Even more astonishing than the thematic parallels among all these stories were the similarities in manner. Heavily influenced by such older writers as Ann Beattie and the late Raymond Carver, the Literary Brat Pack operated on the assumption that the best way to convey the sense of the character was not to scrutinize his heart but to describe his furniture, to catalog the contents of his closest and kitchen cabinets, to
... (1992 of 20171 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|