Oh the Glory of It All

by Sean Wilsey

Hardcover, 2005

Status

Available

Call number

979.461053092

Collection

Publication

Penguin Press HC, The (2005), Edition: First Edition, 496 pages

Description

"In the beginning we were happy. And we were always excessive. So in the beginning we were happy to excess." With these opening lines Sean Wilsey takes us on an exhilarating tour of life in the strangest, wealthiest, and most grandiose of families. Sean's blond-bombshell mother (one of the thinly veiled characters in Armistead Maupin's bestselling Tales of the City) is a 1980s society-page staple, regularly entertaining Black Panthers and movie stars in her marble and glass penthouse, "eight hundred feet in the air above San Francisco; an apartment at the top of a building at the top of a hill: full of light, full of voices, full of windows full of water and bridges and hills." His enigmatic father uses a jet helicopter to drop Sean off at the video arcade and lectures his son on proper hygiene in public restrooms, "You should wash your hands first, before you use the urinal. Not after. Your penis isn't dirty. But your hands are." When Sean, "the kind of child who sings songs to sick flowers," turns nine years old, his father divorces his mother and marries her best friend. Sean's life blows apart. His mother first invites him to commit suicide with her, then has a "vision" of salvation that requires packing her Louis Vuitton luggage and traveling the globe, a retinue of multiracial children in tow. Her goal: peace on earth (and a Nobel Prize). Sean meets Indira Gandhi, Helmut Kohl, Menachem Begin, and the pope, hoping each one might come back to San Francisco and persuade his father to rejoin the family. Instead, Sean is pushed out of San Francisco and sent spiraling through five high schools, till he finally lands at an unorthodox reform school cum "therapeutic community," in Italy. With its multiplicity of settings and kaleidoscopic mix of preoccupations-sex, Russia, jet helicopters, seismic upheaval, boarding schools, Middle Earth, skinheads, home improvement, suicide, skateboarding, Sovietology, public transportation, massage, Christian fundamentalism, dogs, Texas, global thermonuclear war, truth, evil, masturbation, hope, Bethlehem, CT, eventual salvation (abridged list)--Oh the Glory of It All is memoir as bildungsroman as explosion.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member BigTex
The number of stars (3) was assigned primarily to tip my hat at Wilsey's wittiness in describing his mother and some other pre-highschool moments. Otherwise, a big chunk of the book is kind of aimless. I kept wishing to understand more about what motivated him, and assumed that the hundreds of
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subsequent pages would justify some of the anecdotes, but they never did...
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LibraryThing member aliciamalia
I've had numerous people recommend this book. Sean Wilsey is the son of a San Francisco socialite, and (by my calculations) about 35 years old. The book gets off to a running start, detailing the excesses and idiosyncracies of his highly colorful parents. By the half-way point, however, the book
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has lost its focus. What's the subject? Sean's life? His mother? Boarding schools of the 1980s? Ultimately there's enough good material here to make it a worthwhile read, but you'll have to wade your way through all the surplus writing.
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LibraryThing member Clif
This book made be feel a bit uncomfortable reading about personal and family matters that normally shouldn't be made public. But I enjoyed it anyway. The writing is good and carries the reader's interest. The story ends well with the teenager who was a royal screw-up finally becoming enough of a
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mature adult to write this book. Thank goodness he survived his childhood. The story makes me thankful that I wasn't born rich.

Read in November, 2007
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LibraryThing member shayk
Like Dave Egger's Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, only got boring...might try again.
LibraryThing member kirstiecat
This follows the autobiographical (though I am sure rather embellished) account of the son of a famous millionaire family (the Wilseys) on the West coast of America. Life must be weird when you grew up around Danielle Steele and I would guess things could only get better from then on. Our
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protagonist is a wreck and can't seem to get over the separation and divorce of his parents. While it's true that their relationships becomes strained with him caught in the middle and that he is not given the same great attention is new step siblings are, this is no male Cinderella here. The bottom line is that he has thousands more opportunities than most kids get and was raised in luxury. What he did instead of try to work through his issues and prove to his new step mom that he wasn't a complete wastrel is to fulfill her prophesies and flunk out of every rich school his parents sent him to acquiring all kinds of drug habits and venereal diseases in the meantime. As his options wane, the schools become successively more restrictive and like prisons but it's really his own choices and volition that have brought him these consequences and I can't say I felt too sorry for him at all. What I disliked greatly about the book is that I think his point was that you were supposed to feel a little sorry for him. He makes a huge effort with his poor me routine and makes his eventual recovery seem like this magnificent feat when the truth is many more have done greater things with less. The only slight satisfaction I received is that the stepmom, who I hated even more than the main protagonist, probably received her just desserts when the book was released and slandered her.
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LibraryThing member KristySP
I enjoyed this book at first, but then it grew dull and tiresome and I ended up skimming the last 150 pages.
LibraryThing member RealLifeReading
I'm just about 1/3 through this book but I just can't bear to put it down.

But about 2/3 of the way through, I have to admit I skipped over quite a few pages. The whole thing about Amity and the Propheets just wasn't for me.
LibraryThing member TheDivineOomba
I wasn't interested in the subject matter. I got through a few chapters, and realized I didn't care about any of these people. However, it was well written, and if you like stories about over the top dysfunctional families this is the book for you.

Original language

English

Original publication date

2005

Physical description

496 p.; 6.36 inches

ISBN

9781594200519

Local notes

Located in Bio's & Memoirs (WI)
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