Good As Gold

by Joseph Heller

Paperback, 1979

Status

Available

Call number

F HEL

Tags

Collection

Publication

Pocket Books (Mm) (1979), Paperback

Description

Gold accepts a government post in Washington, considers leaving his wife, and all the while he is also searching for material to write his book on the Jewish experience in America, without realizing he is going through that experience.

Barcode

2759

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member gbill
There are three themes in Joseph Heller’s ‘Good as Gold’, published in 1979 when the author was 56, and 18 years after his masterpiece ‘Catch-22’. The first is to describe the Jewish experience growing up in America, which Heller’s character Bruce Gold sets out to do but struggles
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because he’s not sure he’s had one. Instead, Heller illustrates with everything surrounding Gold: for example, his loud, opinionated, and verbally abusive father, the very blunt way he and his own daughter communicate, and the racism against Jews by elites and those in power. Gold has a constant feeling of persecution, and it’s almost always by those less intelligent than himself.

The next is to skewer the American government of the mid-70’s, which had just gone through Nixon, Watergate, and Vietnam. Heller takes special aim at Henry Kissinger, who his character sees as a war-mongering, self-serving egomaniac who is a traitor to his race and possibly a war criminal. I found these parts of the book to be especially good. The incompetence of those in power, the lack of qualification necessary to get cabinet posts, the talking in circles and lying, the government spying on its own citizens, politicians making money by writing books instead of serving jail time for their scandals, and the bureaucracy of it are all parodied. As he tries to get a job in government, it’s explained to him that “This president doesn’t want yes-men. What we want are independent men of integrity who will agree with all our decisions after we make them.” All of this is timely reading with Trump as president, and this reminder of the dark times America went through dealing with Nixon’s abuse of power and a number of scandals in government at the time, and yet persevered, perhaps provides solace to our current sad state of affairs.

Lastly, Heller is also describing a darkening view of life at middle-age. He doesn’t have the perfect marriage, and cheats. He wants a sexually free woman, but recoils from just how free some of them are. He sees stupidity and sadism in the recent conservative administration and in the rich, but he is also disillusioned about liberals, idealism, and mankind in general. “Either Gold had grown more conservative or civilization had grown progressively worse. Or both.” He laments urban decay on Coney Island, where he grew up. He wishes to look back at his life and his youth, but finds several times that his memories of how things were are not accurate.

I suppose this is the reason for not giving the book a higher rating – while it’s not completely dark and there is humor throughout, and while it may be a perfectly honest snapshot of Heller at this time in his life, it does feel a bit too much like a crotchety old man at times, and less enjoyable as a result. You could certainly do worse though.
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LibraryThing member colinflipper
Working in an academic environment, I was pretty well amused by the extremely cynical (and not inaccurate) attitude the Gold has towards his professorial responsibilities. I don't have the first hand experience to gauge how accurately the book skewers government officials, WASPy Virginians, or
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Brooklyn Jewish families, but the whole book was funny, if a bit long. The action picked up near the end with a very cool and surreal chapter that switched dreamlike between Gold running laps and trying to navigate between two different trysts in Acupulco, and finally ending up in the hospital. Another highlight was the aristocratic, perpetually drunk, and hilariously vulgar aristocrat Pugh Biddle Conover, who was mirrored by Gold's less vulgar but equally combative father.
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LibraryThing member J.v.d.A.
Not a great book by any stretch of the imagination, but I didn't mind it.
LibraryThing member Radaghast
I was looking for Catch-22 in the library. I couldn't find it, so I read this instead. Ultimately uplifting (sort of), Good as Gold is about a college professor who begins to question the course of his life. Not normally my preference, it is surprisingly interesting.
LibraryThing member Grendelschoice
He'll always be remembered best for "Catch 22"‐‐and for good
reason‐‐but this is my favorite of Heller's books. It's almost too funny for words and holds up as great political satire even though it takes place in the 1970's. Does for politics what "Catch 22" did for war.
LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
Joseph Heller struck gold with "Catch -22", and sadly hasn't hit anywhere near that speed since. But This novel about the life and career shake-up than ensues when a man is offered a post as Secretary of State is quite entertaining. But the book didn't stick with me afterwards.
LibraryThing member Thomas_Cannon
Loved it the first time I read it.
LibraryThing member Thomas_Cannon
Loved it the first time I read it.
LibraryThing member Thomas_Cannon
Loved it the first time I read it.
LibraryThing member m.belljackson
After reading about all the familial bullying, I was expecting to like Bruce Gold.

A lying, cheating adulterer with racist right wing views left me wondering where all the humor is supposed to lie.
And, why-OH- why did he keep returning to the detestable family dinners where everyone catered to the
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father?
It all became far too predictable.

Politics, notably skewering of Kissinger, was welcome old reading.
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LibraryThing member HenriMoreaux
This is certainly a very Jewish book, there's almost two separate stories within, one being the political satire story, and the other being a middle aged man's struggle with his own family and relationships as he essentially undergoes a mid life crisis in both career and marriage.

There's some
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coarse language and quite a few racial epithets employed in the narrative and I found that after a while the satirical aspect became rather tiresome and rote.

Whilst it held my interest for the most part I didn't feel particularly enthralled by the narrative. The numerous unexplained Yiddish terms littered throughout the novel didn't endear me to the writing. At least the ending wrapped up the story lines nicely, you were finally able to feel something for a character that prior to the end did not have many (or dare I say any) redeeming features.

Overall, it's okay.
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LibraryThing member Thomas.Cannon
Loved it the first time I read it.
LibraryThing member mykl-s
Another one I remember reading some years ago, without now recalling its details.

ISBN

0671823884 / 9780671823887
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