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Medium Dave ([info]mediumdave) wrote in [info]guiltypleasures,
@ 2006-10-17 14:17:00


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Looks like I'm the first to bite...
...so to speak.

A few weeks ago I noticed an old paperback on our bookshelf called Grand Obese, by one Cesar J. Rotondi. I'd never heard of the book or the author. My wife then picked it up and read it, and told me, "This is horrifying. You've got to read it."

Never one to resist a challenge like that, I plowed through the novel in a couple of days, which is blazing speed for me. It was fascinating, and memorable, in a train-wreck sort of way.

Grand Obese is the story of a stunningly fat family of three living on the near north side of Chicago (gentrified these days, but in the late 1970's when the novel takes place the neighborhood was getting shabby). Mother Sylvie and her children Gregory and Deborah have one overriding interest in life: Eating. Their entire lives revolve around the acquisition and consumption of food... pizzas, Chinese food, fried chicken, gourmet... in a way that transcends gluttony and goes far into self-destructive territory. In this they are abetted by a trust set up by Sylvie's former husband, and by their live-in maid, Dorothy. Everyone else (neighbors, relatives and the like) treats them with pity or contempt, or both.

Dorothy is perhaps the most sympathetic character, as her life was an increasingly sad journey from one crushing disappointment to another before finally landing in Sylvie's house. For awhile she finds it to be a refuge, as the expectations are so low... as long as she keeps the family well fed, they're unconcerned with her drinking and pot-smoking on the job and her indifferent house-cleaning. It is Dorothy, however, who finally becomes fed up, and her leaving is a dramatic turning point.

After this, the story becomes even darker and more grotesque, and by the end it's a dilemma for the reader: Which is worse, Sylvie and her brood's narcissism, or the outside world's cruelty toward them? I tend to think it's the latter.

(Now that I've finished the book, the Mrs. wants me to get rid of it. An impulse that I completely understand.)


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[info]pyratejenni
2006-10-17 11:27 pm UTC (link)
Congratulations on being the first to post! I had planned to, but I never Got A Round Tuit.

Sounds like a creepy book. I hadn't heard of it before, but I'll keep my eyes open for it.

(Reply to this)(Thread)


[info]mediumdave
2006-10-18 04:02 pm UTC (link)
I think I liked this book for three reasons: It's surreal without being overtly fantastic, which I think is a sign of a skilled writer at work. And I like grotesque and macabre stories, up to a point (I blame Poe). Thirdly, as I said in a personal JF post recently, it's a very good portrayal of a narcissistic personality, and that's a topic that has preoccupied me lately.

Sylvie is the most narcissistic character in the book, because she views the entire world as a delivery system for satisfying her appetite. Even her own children barely register as real people to her (though it's interesting that their father, who abandoned them, is more or less off the hook).

Well, also I have a soft spot for good but obscure, not-so-prolific authors. (Four reasons...)

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