The Disappointment Artist & Other Essays

Jonathan Lethem

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The Disappointment Artist & Other Essays

By: Jonathan Lethem

Narrarated by: Jonathan Lethem

In a volume he describes as “a series of covert and no-so-covert autobiographical pieces,” Jonathan Lethem explores the nature of cultural obsession—in his case, with examples as diverse as western films, comic books, the music of Talking Heads and Pink Floyd, and the New York City subway. Along the way, he shows how each of these “voyages out from himself” have led him home—home to his father's life as a painter, and to the source of his beginnings as a writer. THE DISAPPOINTMENT ARTIST is a series of windows onto the collisions of art, landscape, and personal history that formed Lethem’s richly imaginative, searingly honest perspective on life as a human creature in the jungle of culture at the end of the twentieth century.

From a confession of the sadness of a “Star Wars nerd” to an investigation into the legacy of a would-be literary titan, Lethem illuminates the process by which a child invents himself as a writer, and as a human being, through a series of approaches to the culture around him. In “The Disappointment Artist,” a letter from his aunt, a children’s book author, spurs a meditation on the value of writing workshops, and the uncomfortable fraternity of writers. In “Defending The Searchers” Lethem explains how a passion for the classic John Wayne Western became occasion for a series of minor humiliations. In “Identifying with Your Parents,” an excavation of childhood love for superhero comics expands to cover a whole range of nostalgia for a previous generation’s cultural artifacts. And “13/1977/21,” which begins by recounting the summer he saw Star Wars twenty-one times, “slipping past ushers who’d begun to recognize me . . . occult as a porn customer,” becomes a meditation on the sorrow and solace of the solitary movie-goer.

THE DISAPPOINTMENT ARTIST confirms Lethem's unique ability to illuminate the way life, his and ours, can be read between the lines of art and culture.

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  • Edition: Abridged
  • Author: Jonathan Lethem (See All Books)
  • Date Released: Sep 17, 2007
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Genre: Music & Entertainment, Essays, Personal Memoir

Total File Size: 103 MB (3 files) Total Length: 3 Hours, 45 Minutes

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Karrie Higgins

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09.17.07
Jonathan Lethem, The Disappointment Artist & Other Essays
2007 | Label: Random House Audio

One of modern literature's great talents sounds off on his various obsessions.
In "Defending the Searchers," the opening essay of The Disappointment Artist, Lethem dons a pair of glasses in order to "appear nerdishly remote and intense," decorating his "outer self with a confession of inner reality." His recorded voice achieves the same effect — as though by reading with the cool detachment of a film-studies professor or a psychoanalyst, his inner reality will be laid bare. And it is. "The Disappointment Artist" seems meant for headphones.

The Disappointment Artist collects essays confessing obsessions with everything from the John Wayne western The Searchers to the "Heavenly Music Corporation" side of Fripp & Eno's No Pussyfooting album. Ultimately, Lethem admits to using his fixations to escape the central, defining tragedy in his life: the death of his mother. But it runs much deeper than this. "I learned to think by watching my father paint," Lethem reflects in "The Lives of the Bohemians," revealing how profoundly personally he takes art, and how this autodidact came to be.

By the time I arrived at "The Beards," which Lethem calls a "coda" for the collection because it “pulls threads out of all” the preceding essays in order “to account for them,” I realized that this book had achieved a similar kind of accounting for Lethem’s entire body of fiction. It was not just the words in the essays, but his voice as well — its remoteness a confession all its own.

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This wouldn't play on my portable like the others

abra_kalola

The rating is not with regard to the book it's towards emusic on this count. They owe me one, or I guess I'll have to be chained to my desktop computer to listen to this book, but it feels like a rip off since I bought it solely for use on my mp3 player. (Never had any other problem with an audiobook before downloading this. Confound it!)