I Should Have Known Better

I Should Have Known Better

  • Downloads:3022
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-09-17 08:41:02
  • Update Date:2025-09-24
  • Status:finish
  • Author:William E. Jones
  • ISBN:0578761807
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

I Should Have Known Better is a sequel to the sleeper hit I'm Open to Anything (2019), expanding the original's scope and ambition。 The new book has been produced entirely with the support of a crowdfunding campaign that reached five figures and 150% funding, an unprecedented accomplishment for a literary novel。 I Should Have Known Better's first person narrator, while working at a dead-end job in Los Angeles during the mid-1990s, reconnects with his best friend Moira, recently returned from Central America, and makes a new friend, Bernie, who teaches the history of photography。 The two of them convince him to pursue a master's degree as a way of escaping the unrewarding life of a video store clerk。 Once the narrator is exposed to an academic environment, he takes a dim view of the education that art school has to offer, but is happy to meet a group of talented fellow students who become close friends。 He encounters a number of art world figures, ranging from the brilliant to the abject, who disabuse him of his illusions。 The narrator has his most instructive experiences off campus, especially a love affair with the handsome and mercurial Temo, an insolent rich kid who leads a double life。 Together they explore their sexual limits in scenes of bracing explicitness。 I Should Have Known Better bears witness to the last gasp of Los Angeles bohemia at the end of the twentieth century。 The novel paints precise portraits of inspired eccentrics devoted to pursuing their dreams, "shopping artists" who believe in nothing but hedonism, and latter-day leftists who find themselves directionless after the fall of communism。 Above all, the book pays tribute to the impulsive experiments and intense friendships of youth。

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Reviews

ATG

I Should Have Known Better picks up where I'm Open to Anything left off and, while it maintains the delicious perversity of that first novel, the fisting is much more muted here。 Jones is an outstanding novelist and he excels at creating characters so vivid they almost walk off the page。 Among those characters is the city of Los Angeles。 If, like me, you missed out on the bohemian golden years before gentrification blighted this particular landscape, these novels recreate a lost time in sumptuou I Should Have Known Better picks up where I'm Open to Anything left off and, while it maintains the delicious perversity of that first novel, the fisting is much more muted here。 Jones is an outstanding novelist and he excels at creating characters so vivid they almost walk off the page。 Among those characters is the city of Los Angeles。 If, like me, you missed out on the bohemian golden years before gentrification blighted this particular landscape, these novels recreate a lost time in sumptuous detail。 The narrator we know only by his friend Moira's Spanished "Guillermito" goes to Cal Arts, works at a Communist bookshop, and falls in with a cast of misfits and oddballs of the sort people used to call "cards"。 The core system consists of our narrator, Winston Smith (an Albanian expat who named himself after the protagonist of 1984 without having read that book), and Gregorio (a New Mexico expat who was "one of those evil 12 year olds" who experiment early with sexuality and who falls in love with Winston at Cal Arts)。 This group is set spinning by the rogue planet, Cuauhtémoc, Temo for short。 In his fascinating complexity and mystery, all of which is done in masterfully understated prose, Temo almost steals the show。 The ending is one of those subtly brilliant denouements that lingers in the mind a long time after the novel is closed。 Take a chance on these books。 I'd wager you'll be happy you did。 。。。more

Macartney

Smart and sexy。 A true triumph。