home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1611>
- <title>
- May 03, 1993: Reviews:Books
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 03, 1993 Tragedy in Waco
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 79
- BOOKS
- The Misery Artist
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JOHN SKOW
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>TITLE: FOR LOVE</l>
- <l>AUTHOR: Sue Miller</l>
- <l>PUBLISHER: HarperCollins; 301 Pages; $23</l>
- </qt>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: A dolorous bedroom farce that could be
- titled Whimpers of a Summer Night.
- </p>
- <p> Pick a page, any page. Here's 283: "She is tired, she is
- in pain. There is just a jumble, finally. The sense of false
- understanding, of confusion and vulnerability at the core; all
- of it driven by the steady and growing pain from her tooth." Or
- page 89: "She remembered those two months...as being among
- the most miserable of her life." Or page 31: "...she feels
- a tug of revulsion at herself...for moving cowlike, thickly..." Lottie Gardner does, in fact, have serious dental
- problems throughout this irritating novel. But the ruling fact
- of her life is not that she has a toothache, but that she is
- one.
- </p>
- <p> She is a misery artist, the kind of old friend you make
- excuses not to have lunch with. She is healthy, toothache aside,
- reasonably attractive and not clinically depressed, but she
- defines her life entirely by her relationships with other
- people, and these always fall short of felicity.
- </p>
- <p> Lottie's neurotic elder brother resumes an obsessive
- affair with Elizabeth, a shallow beauty Lottie continues to
- resent because of snubs in their high school years. Her
- 21-year-old son sleeps with Elizabeth's baby-sitter, then
- ignores her, and when she dies in an auto accident decreed by
- the author to get everyone's moping started, wonders fretfully
- whether he is obliged to attend her funeral. Other people behave
- shabbily, all of them, like Lottie, largely humorless and
- utterly self-absorbed. An occasional good line briefly clears
- the prevailing swamp gas, as when Lottie sums things up for her
- brother's lover's complaining husband: "She left you. You chased
- her. On the great seesaw of love, she's up and you're down."
- </p>
- <p> What is welcome about this deft writing-off of a twerp is
- that the voice is not Lottie's. It is the author's, and the
- effect is to give the reader distance from characters who,
- though they don't realize this, are acting out a comedy. But
- novelist Miller, instead of describing the mawkishness, chose
- to take trifling people seriously. The result is that although
- the author's previous novel Family Pictures became a prime-time
- TV mini-series, For Love is daytime soap opera.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-