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Tomcat in Love
 
 

Tomcat in Love (Paperback)

by Tim O'Brien (Author) "I begin with the ridiculous, in June 1952, middle-century Minnesota, on that silvery-hot morning when Herbie Zylstra and I nailed two plywood boards together and..." (more)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Flamingo; New Ed edition (17 April 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0006551521
  • ISBN-13: 978-0006551522
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12.2 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 888,544 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #11 in  Books > Fiction > Authors, A-Z > O > O'Brien, Tim

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

To date, Tim O'Brien's novels have all shared common traits: his heroes hail from the Midwest, usually Minnesota; Vietnam figures prominently; and the stories he tells, though invested with mordant wit, are usually pretty grim. So an O'Brien fan coming to Tomcat in Love on the heels of his earlier novels can be forgiven for occasionally checking the name on the cover (and the photo on the dust jacket) just to be sure this is, indeed, the same Tim O'Brien who wrote Going After Cacciato, The Things They Carried, If I Die in a Combat Zone, and In the Lake of the Woods.

In Tomcat in Love O'Brien introduces us to a very different hero: "In summary, then, my circumstances were these. Something over forty-nine years of age. Recently divorced. Pursued. Prone to late-night weeping. Betrayed not once but threefold: by the girl of my dreams, by her Pilate of a brother, and by a Tampa real-estate tycoon whose name I have vowed never again to utter."

Thomas H. Chippering, professor of linguistics, war hero, and sex magnet--in his own mind, at least--has recently lost his childhood sweetheart and wife of 20 years to another man, the Tampa magnate, and Lorna Sue's desertion has clearly unhinged him. He has taken to flying down to Tampa from Minnesota on weekends to spy on his ex-wife and plot revenge against her, the tycoon, and Lorna Sue's brother, Herbie, whom he blames for destroying his marriage.

Thomas, Lorna Sue, and Herbie go back a long way together, bound equally by ties of love, guilt and suspicion. Dating from the afternoon young Herbie nailed an even younger Lorna Sue's hand to a makeshift cross, Thomas has occupied a kind of emotional no man's land between the two: "In my bleakest moods, when black gets blackest, I think of it as a high perversion: Herbie coveted his own sister. Which is a fact. The stone truth. He was in love with her. More generously, I will sometimes concede that it was not sexual love, or not entirely, and that Herbie was driven by the obsessions of a penitent, a torturer turned saviour. Partly, too, I am quite certain that Herbie secretly associated me with his own guilt. I was present at the beginning. My backyard, my plywood, my green paint."

Chippering takes his revenge to hilarious lengths, starting with a purple leather bra and panties stuffed beneath the seat of the tycoon's car and escalating from there. But even as he attempts to wreak havoc in his ex-wife's life, he succeeds in laying ruin to his own. His self- proclaimed irresistibility to women gets him in hot water with both his female students and his administration; his obsession with Lorna Sue threatens his budding romance with Mrs. Robert Kooshof, a woman who loves him as his wife never did--and, oh yes, there's that little matter of the squad of Green Berets he crossed many years before in Vietnam who may or may not be hunting him down.

Once you get over the shock of this new, funny Tim O'Brien, traces of the writer you thought you knew begin to surface. Chippering might be a pompous, overbearing windbag, but you can't trust him any more than you did any of O'Brien's other earthier, equally unreliable narrators. In one breath, he tells us, "I must in good conscience point out that women find me attractive beyond words. And who on earth could blame them?" In the next he describes himself as resembling "a clean-shaven version of our sixteenth president." Half the fun of reading Tomcat in Love is trying to sort out just how much of what Thomas H. Chippering tells us is true. Stellar writing, a brilliant cast of characters, and a sly, surprising story that breaks your heart one minute and tickles your funny bone the next all make Tim O'Brien's first foray into the comic novel a resounding success. --Alix Wilber, Amazon.comEND --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



Review

'An extraordinary novel, a sustained and sophisticated comedy.' Guardian 'Richly comedic! like a WASPish version of Roth's Portnoy's Complaint! dangerously funny.' Daily Express 'O'Brien is at his best in this macabre black comedy! a dark, clever fable! extremely funny.' Sunday Telegraph 'A wonderful novel, laugh-out-loud funny.' Washington Post 'Lust, laughs and literary mastery.' New York Post

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I begin with the ridiculous, in June 1952, middle-century Minnesota, on that silvery-hot morning when Herbie Zylstra and I nailed two plywood boards together and called it an airplane. Read the first page
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7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dreadful start but a good finish: 3.5 stars really, 20 Jul 2000
By A Customer
I bought this book because I wanted some lightness; but after a large number of pages I almost put it down, on to the donate to charity pile. It went on and on in the style of someone who had a serious problem with Lorna Sue that I really didn't need to know any more about. Then just as I thought that, page 124, page 125 lit up my life: it just got a huge amount better. I then enjoyed just about everything that followed, up to and including page 369, the end!

Whilst the central character of the book, Thomas, is at least partially redeemed by the end of it, he is an incredible man. A sexual legend ... in his own mind, he keeps a ledger of all the women he has ogled, fancied, wanted. There are hundreds of women in this book; but he admits to conquering only four of them: enough said?

Although Thomas is a genuine jerk, his antics kept me riveted. He wrote a student's dissertation from start to finish: well, she was pretty; but when she started to thank him for his endeavours, he ran away! He haunted his former wife, her new husband and her brother, seeking revenge for a divorce he didn't want. He ended up in psychiatric care. Page 289 summarises this man and his life quite nicely for us:

"The divorce alone had completely drained me. And then add to that the frenetic travel, the spying and scheming and marital sabotage, my troubles with Toni (the student), the composition of a brilliant honors thesis, a public spanking, my recent career change, my day care duties, a television debut, my tumultuous, not to mention tenuous engagement to Mrs Robert Kooshof. For any other man, all this would have constituted a full life's journey; for me, it had been compressed into less than a year."

Wacky or what?

About half way through the book, I started getting flashes of The Secret Diaries of Adrian Mole (at any age, but including aged 13¾!). Of course, that sparked off the memory of The Diary of a Nobody, too. However, Thomas is even more intense than either Mole or Pooter!

What I didn't like was the way the author kept throwing single words and groups of words around and then wax lyrical about how evocative they were: I know Thomas is supposed to be a Professor of Linguistics; but I didn't need to share this part of his life, I'm afraid

Overall a good read but the poor, repetitive, start lets it down somewhat.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Nearly as good as Confederacy of Dunces, 24 Aug 2009
By E. W. Collier "tobyfin" (Cheltenham, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
A few years ago I read and thoroughly enjoyed "July July", and wondered why O' Brien wasn't better known. Casting around for some books to take on holiday I bought this and "If I Die In A Combat Zone". "If I Die..." is a serious, straightforward attempt to convey the horror of the grunt in Viet Nam, and I'd recommend it.

The first few pages of "Tomcat in Love" troubled me slightly, until I got the narrator's voice and register. Once I had them, everything else fell into place. O'Brien's dissection of a deluded academic is brilliant and pitiless, but it's also very funny. The recurring riffs, pompous footnotes and cast of characters make this a superb read - just go and buy it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Utterly sublime and VERY amusing!, 30 April 2009
I tend to take the 'reviews' on dust-jackets with a pinch of salt, largely because they are usually the antithesis of what the book is really like. The Guardian said of this text, that it was 'extraordinary... sustained... spectacular', whilst The Washington Post described it as 'Laugh-out-loud-funny'. Excuse me, but stop and rewind there. Tim O'Brien... THE Tim O'Brien? It is he of the Vietnam obsession we are talking about here? Laughs?... surely there must be a mistake.

Having read 'Cacciato', 'If I die' and 'The Things', all of which are arguably amongst the best post-war fiction ever penned, I considered myself a staunch O'Brien fan, that was until I read 'Northern Lights', which is just SO bad - REALLY bad (this is not the place to explain why), and then the emperor was laid bare. I was therefore somewhat wary of shelling out for more of the same and had pretty much accepted the fact that the three prior mentioned works were his best and anything else would just be one publishing deal too far. By chance, however, I picked up a cheap copy of 'Tomcat' and thought I'd give it a go - I am SO glad I did. In 'Tomcat' we find a new O'Brien who has grown up and moved on from Vietnam: reborn, realigned, refocused, sharp, witty and just plain entertaining.

This novel works for so many reasons and is effectively a sample of how a perfect novel should be: great central character - well-drawn and empathetic, sustained and original story, original concept, humorous, creative and well-written. In fact it is almost too good (is that possible?) it is almost too polished, too perfect, too brilliant. One gets the impression that O'Brien may have originated it as part of his creative-writing course on how to construct a great novel. Who knows? One thing is certain and that this witty story should engage all readers, one will either love and sympathise with the central character or (if you are female), hate him and wish him ill. Either way O'Brien will get your emotions going and get you to select a side on which to bat - there is no middle-ground here.

Built around the themes of love, obsession, passion, memory, naïvety, childhood, fate, karma and revenge this story is a roller-coaster; never dull, never predictable, never bland, always thoroughly entertaining and thought provoking. Add to that the fact Vietnam is barely mentioned! Highly recommended, especially to men or empathic people with a slightly dark sense of humour.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Chippering is a wonderful comic creation.
One of the few books to have me laughing out loud. Chippering is a pompous, vain, conceited, middle-aged child. I know a few like him. They will receive copies. From Fiji.
Published on 12 April 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars i think the other reviewers missed the point.
If you like tim o'brien's other's, you'll enjoy this. Similar to some of Philip Roth's best work, i was immediately hooked and remained so all the way through.
Published on 12 Nov 2000

1.0 out of 5 stars Great press reviews, shame about the book.
I see this book only has one other Customer revwiew. Unlike its cover and inside pages, which I have to admit fooled me. I agree with your customer's first sentence. Read more
Published on 28 Jul 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Linguistic fireworks illuminate comic tale of obsession
On one level, Tim O' Brien's brilliant new novel is an hysterical, laugh-out-loud account of an abandoned husband's quest for vengeance and inexorable breakdown, a study of how... Read more
Published on 6 Jul 1999

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