Publisher's
Weekly Review:
This ambitious and very funny novel tells the coming-of-age
story of Lyle Clemens, "the child who would grow
up to become the Mystery Cowboy who appeared naked along
Hollywood Boulevard." It's a tall tale, a simultaneously
sweet and vicious satire of contemporary America, with
the handsome, empathic and guileless Lyle an innocent
in a cruel world serving as vehicle for Rechy's reflections
on religion, sexuality, fame and greed. Self-consciously
modeled on Henry Fielding's 18th-century classic The History
of Tom Jones, A Foundling, the book begins with Lyle's
birth in Rio Escondido, Tex., to the unwed Sylvia Love,
whose dream of becoming Miss America was shattered by
her Bible-thumping mother Eulah. The book feels at times
like one of Robert Altman's classic films, perhaps Nashville,
with its expansive canvas and its mixture of humor and
sadness. Moving with fluid grace from Anaheim, Calif.,
to Las Vegas and Hollywood, the story features a large
cast of characters, most of whom use Lyle to further their
own ambitions, notably Brother Bud and Sister Sis, a pair
of greedy televangelists, and a has-been actress named
Tarah Worth. Rechy has great command of this sprawling
narrative, and he generally strikes the right balance
between satire and real emotion. His humor can be less
than subtle an unsavory pair of mismatched pornographers
and a crooked banker are named after several standing
Supreme Court justices and his explicit, campy sex scenes
won't please everyone. Still, this distinctly American
novel is ultimately about the search for love and redemption,
about the ideal of "amazing grace" from the
old song that serves as a touchstone for Lyle. It's a
comic tour de force and, at the same time, a truly heartfelt
book. (Oct.) Forecast: Rechy, author of the 1963 gay classic
City of Night, is an American original a kind of cross
between Mark Twain and Terry Southern. This new book should
introduce him to a broader range of readers and strengthen
his claim to stardom. |