Customer Review

2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Voice -- Cody James Has It, 9 Dec 2010
This review is from: The Dead Beat (Kindle Edition)
Some writers create books full of non-stop action and noise. Others take hundreds of pages to tell sprawling stories that span generations. Cody James writes pitch-perfect short-novels in which the world is revealed to us in the smallest details.

I fell under the hypnotic spell of James' prose when reading her first novel, Babylon -- which unfortunately doesn't seem to be available at the moment. (I hope it's reissued soon,) Her second novel, The Dead Beat, is not a disappointment.

The Dead Beat is set during the summer of 1997 in and around San Francisco. Adam, a blocked writer and meth addict is our narrator. He lives in the usual squalor with his fellow-junkie friends. Not much happens. A comet comes and goes as do a couple of girlfriends and jobs. Resolutions are made and broken. It all leads somewhere, sort of.

But you don't read James for her plots. You read her for the voice, the inimitable, bewitching rhythm that gets into your head and builds itself a home.

A writer to whom she's arguably comparable is Flannery O'Connor though Bukowski might be a more obvious choice. O'Connor was famous for her Catholicism, and James is a self-avowed Satanist, but both are astute observers able to capture the human condition concisely. Both offer their characters (and readers) momentary glimpses of a greater truth -- what O'Connor defined as "grace." Neither is ever guilty of sentimentality, and both write in prose sharp enough to draw blood.

In The Dead Beat, James has the technical challenge of telling the story in the first person through Adam. She must filter her voice to fit him. It's always a bit of magic when a writer can pull this off, whether it's Samuel Clemens convincing us he's Huck Finn or Nabokov masquerading as Humbert. Adam is probably more reliable than either of those two, but he's still limited. -- dead pan, shut down, often high, looking for drugs or in withdrawal.

The grace here is not heaven sent. If there is a greater power at work, it's one that comes from community -- however warped. Adam and his roommates care for each other as best they can. The transcendent is what's left of their humanity -- what the addiction hasn't yet destroyed -- their ability to be kind to each other -- to connect. It's the sometimes goofy conversations about every day stuff that show us these lost souls -- the debate about whether "uncomfort" is a word, whether pot heads are more annoying than coke heads, and of course whether anything has any meaning at all.

This is a novel in which characters struggle to find a reason to go on living, yet it's strangely life affirming. James has brought us Adam's truth, and ultimately it's our truth as well, one with which we all struggle and can identify.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

Be the first person to comment on this review.

[Add comment]
Post a comment
To insert a product link use the format: [[ASIN:ASIN product-title]] (What's this?)
Amazon will display this name with all your submissions, including reviews and discussion posts. (Learn more)
Name:
Badge:
This badge will be assigned to you and will appear along with your name.
There was an error. Please try again.
Please see the full guidelines ">here.

Official Comment

As a representative of this product you can post one Official Comment on this review. It will appear immediately below the review wherever it is displayed.   Learn more
The following name and badge will be shown with this comment:
 (edit name)
After clicking on the Post button you will be asked to create your public name, which will be shown with all your contributions.

Is this your product?

If you are the author, artist, manufacturer or an official representative of this product, you can post an Official Comment on this review. It will appear immediately below the review wherever it is displayed.  Learn more
Otherwise, you can still post a regular comment on this review.

Is this your product?

If you are the author, artist, manufacturer or an official representative of this product, you can post an Official Comment on this review. It will appear immediately below the review wherever it is displayed.   Learn more
 
System timed out

We were unable to verify whether you represent the product. Please try again later, or retry now. Otherwise you can post a regular comment.

Since you previously posted an Official Comment, this comment will appear in the comment section below. You also have the option to edit your Official Comment.   Learn more
The maximum number of Official Comments have been posted. This comment will appear in the comment section below.   Learn more
Prompts for sign-in
 


Review Details

Item

5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
Out of stock
Add to wishlist
Reviewer


Location: NYC

Top Reviewer Ranking: 417,352