A Way of Life, Like Any Other

by Darcy O'Brien

Other authorsSeamus Heaney (Introduction)
Paperback, 2001

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Collection

Publication

NYRB Classics (2001), Paperback, 176 pages

Description

Fiction. Literature. HTML:This PEN/Hemingway Award winner about coming of age in Los Angeles is a "little gem of a novel . . . a masterwork of Hollywood fiction" (Salon). He's a child of 1940s Hollywood�??specifically, Casa Fiesta, a ranch in the Malibu hills that he shares with his mother, a onetime Broadway headliner, and his father, a star of Westerns. But when his parents fall out of favor in Tinseltown, the narrator of this exquisitely crafted dark comedy loses his youthful idyll and accompanies his lovesick mother on a vodka-soaked international quest for romance and redemption. Meanwhile, his father lives in "diminished circumstances" in California, clinging to his silver-screen mementos, trusting that, someday soon, his ex-wife and his career will return. Tired of tending bar at his mother's parties and listening to his father's sad tales of former glory, the boy moves in with his best friend's family in Beverly Hills. But nothing in La-La Land is quite what it seems, and when his new home turns out to be just as dysfunctional as the last, our teenage hero must somehow learn to accept his parents while finding the courage to break free and become his own man. This award-winning novel, "a kind of Catcher in the Rye for the Cheap Trick generation" (GQ), was cited by the Guardian as one of the "ten best neglected literary masterpieces." Written by a New York Times�??bestselling author who was a child of Hollywood movie stars himself, it has been praised for its "spectacularly deadpan humor" by the Atlantic Monthly and called "an insightful coming-of-age tale" by the Austin Chronicl… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Daedalus
I bought this after reading an interview of Seamus Heaney wherein he spoke at great lengths about hanging out with O'Brien in their youth (relative) and mentioned constantly being shocked at O'Brien's lack of readers.

I ended up impressed and equally shocked. More people should read O'Brien's works.
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If nothing else, it's a better way to spend your time than reading the DaVinci Code.
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LibraryThing member ennie
This 1977 Hollywood novel was published in a new edition with an intro by Seamus Heaney, which indicated it would be more literary than usual. And I didn't like it. It's more a coming of age and family dynamics story than Hollywood dirtfest.
LibraryThing member BDartnall
Part Holden Caufield, part bygone Hollywood tribute, the quirky coming of age of Darcy O'Brien, only son of two aging moving stars. While the young man emerges - a California film industry child bildingsroman- O'Brien gives us a wry look at the decline of each of his parents, and their earlier
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Hollywood world of the '40s. While the author's sympathetic portraits of mother's or father's circle of friends, industry types, and assorted personalities are funny and dead on, I found his later chapters, his own emergence as a teen and young man to be less engaging and somehow glum.
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LibraryThing member CarltonC
A strange book that reads as a fictionalised autobiography of a boy growing up in 1950’s Los Angeles/Hollywood with parents who were in the movies, but had fallen on hard times (relatively) by the time he was a teenager.
The writing style feels detached and mannered, and Seamus Heaney in the
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introduction to my edition describes it as giving “a heightened, necessarily overdone picture of what his childhood and adolescence were like”. However, after the first few chapters I fell into the rhythm of the language and was moderately engaged, but the author seemed determined to intentionally undermine the emotional impact whenever created by his narrative.
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Awards

PEN/Hemingway Award (Winner — 1978)

Language

Physical description

176 p.; 8.01 inches

ISBN

094032279X / 9780940322790

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