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Reviews for Stone Junction

 Stone Junction magazine reviews

The average rating for Stone Junction based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2008-10-13 00:00:00
1998was given a rating of 5 stars Michael Dewees
I'm too tired to organize my thoughts into coherent paragraphs, so instead here's a numbered list thingy, sorry if it's lacking in artistry. 1. I'm about 99 percent sure I've read this before, but I can't remember much of anything about it. When I went to my library to find something else today, this just leapt off the shelf at me, so. 2. Not many books seriously grab you with the first five or ten pages; this one had me riveted by the end of the first paragraph. 3. Jim Dodge -- like Pynchon, though most of you don't believe me -- is so electrifyingly fun to read. Something amazing just shines through every paragraph. 4. Re: 2, that first amazing chapter? It involves a sixteen-year-old pregnant orphan breaking a nun's jaw. If that doesn't make you want to run out and get this book, don't bother reading the rest of this review. 5. I'm going to call this book mystical realism. I think this is distinct from magical realism because the first three quarters of the book is totally grounded in the consensus version of reality (that's good, right? I got it from Atmospheric Disturbances ). But even when it veers into the mystical/magical, it's a shift that is wholly believable because of all of the mystical shit that went on before. 6. Since you probably don't have any clue what I'm talking about, I'll do a quick summary. This is the story of Daniel Pearce. He is the kid who the woman in points 2 and 4 is pregnant with. He grows up in a totally loving and wholly unorthodox environment, as his mom sort of runs a safe house for outlaws (but the honorable kind, the fascinating and brilliant and good kind). Everything is cool until mom is killed when Daniel is fourteen. After that he is taken in by the people for whom his mom ran the safe house: AMO, a loose network of alchemists, magicians, and outlaws. He falls under the tutelage of a series of incredible men and women, who each teach him various amazing skills (meditation and waiting, safecracking, drug and sex appreciation, poker and gambling, disguise, and finally vanishing). You realize that he is amassing the lessons he will need for the quest he's about to embark upon, on which he will both search for his mother's killer and steal a six-pound round diamond from the CIA. 7. I was going to say that this is a bildungsroman, but then I checked Wikipedia, and I guess it's actually a künstlerroman. Regardless, it's a sensational story of an incredible journey undertaken by an amazing hero and populated by a stunning array of fantastic supporting cast members. 8. The book is introduced by Thomas Pynchon. 9. Jim Dodge has a spectacular writing style, combining totally believable dialogue with amazing characters and plenty of beautiful description. As I said earlier, there's a certain kind of author who you can tell just had so much fun writing that you can't help but be just as enthused to read it. 10. I fucking loved this book.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-10-05 00:00:00
1998was given a rating of 5 stars Robert Pearson
I think the last time I was this gripped right from the beginning of a book was when I read House of Leaves, and the time before that was probably Infinite Jest. Stone Junction isn't really much like either of those, though, so don't get the wrong idea. House of Leaves is gimmicky and academic, and Infinite Jest is long and fairly difficult. Stone Junction is significantly shorter* and definitely way more accessible. On the title page it calls itself an "alchemical potboiler." Using the word potboiler isn't totally inaccurate, but I think it does the book a disservice; potboiler to me implies almost pulp, a book that barely has to be thought about. But Stone Junction contains plenty to think about, if you're the thinking type. There's Oedipal stuff, ethical quandaries, obsession, betrayal, outlaws (not to be confused with criminals, as distinguished later), and even a heist. And so on. Basically, Daniel Pearse is being trained by the best in all the dodgiest, sketchiest outlaw arts, in order to get some sweet revenge. And also to steal a huge diamond.** Dodge is a master of aphorism, too, which is a hard thing to be post-Oscar Wilde, post-Maugham, post-Carlin. The thing is, Daniel, the main character, goes through a series of teachers for the first part of the book, who teach him a number of skills that flirt with the supernatural. Mystical is probably an appropriate word. And these teachers dispense knowledge in all sorts of pithy little lines. But the tricky part of having a whole bunch of wise teachers or gurus in your book is that you have to be as smart as all of them. Too often, I see lines that are meant to be philosophically profound, and I end up scoffing at them, because they're either cliché or just kind of...lame. Shantaram is a good example of this. Dodge's aphorisms are spot on, though, which is really cool. Just a couple examples: "'Outlaws only do wrong when they feel it's right; criminals only feel right when they're doing wrong.'" "'I can only echo my old friend Ludwig Wittgenstein's sweeping disclaimer that "the world is the case." Alas, dear listeners, we can only drink it by the glass.'" If that's not enough to grab the attention, I don't know what is. Maybe the first one's a little tired, and the second's more of a joke. Maybe I'm overestimating how much other people will like that sort of thing. Oh, wait, though, did I mention there's a heist? That's my point about this; that there's something for everyone. I should note that, like House of Leaves, and unlike Infinite Jest, the end of the book doesn't quite live up to the promise of the beginning. But no less a man than Thomas Pynchon disagrees with me on that point, and who are you going to believe? Me or him? *I think. The strange thing is that my copy has taller, wider pages than a normal book, and also small, close-packed text, so small it's actually sort of hard to read the passages that are in italics (of which there are few, thankfully). And that comes out to about 350 pages. So it's hard to say. **That's literally all I'm going to say about the plot. Spoilers would likely cripple enjoyment, although I had some slight spoilers thanks to Pynchon's intro, which I skimmed, and I still loved it.


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