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Book Review: 'Bright Shiny Morning' By James Frey

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  • Book Review: 'Bright Shiny Morning' By James Frey

    'BRIGHT SHINY MORNING' BY JAMES FREY
    David L., [email protected]

    Los Angeles Times
    May 13 2008
    CA

    Shallow characters populate this is a poorly written, superficial
    novel set in Los Angeles.

    "Bright Shiny Morning" is a terrible book. One of the worst I've
    ever read. But you have to give James Frey credit for one thing: He's
    got chutzpah. Two and a half years after he was eviscerated by Oprah
    Winfrey for exaggerating many of the incidents in his now-discredited
    memoir "A Million Little Pieces," he's back with this book, which
    aims to be the big novel about Los Angeles, a panoramic look at the
    city that seeks to tell us who we are and how we live.

    Clearly, HarperCollins, Frey's publisher, expects a lot from this
    book; it reportedly paid a million and a half dollars for it. You can
    interpret that in a few ways: as a shrewd business decision (as of
    this writing, the novel is No. 52 at Amazon.com) or as yet another
    symbol of a book industry in crisis, with publishers grasping at
    whatever straws they can to manufacture buzz.

    Ultimately, though, it is still what's on the page that matters, and
    "Bright Shiny Morning" is an execrable novel, a literary train wreck
    without even the good grace to be entertaining.

    Written as an Altman-esque collage, it follows several parallel story
    lines that never coalesce. The idea is to trace a collective vision of
    the city, high and low, from Hollywood to the Valley to East L.A. --
    an attempt to get at the fluidity of Los Angeles.

    There's Old Man Joe, a drunk who inhabits a bathroom on the Venice
    boardwalk and seeks mystical affirmation in a daily ritual. Or
    Amberton Parker, a St. Paul's and Harvard-educated Oscar-winning
    actor, who lives a perfect life with his wife and children and has
    a secret. (Bet you can't guess what it is.)

    As a connective device, Frey interweaves a series of short passages
    outlining the history of L.A., beginning with the founding of the
    Pueblo and extending to the present day. Yet this strategy ends up as
    a metaphor for all that's wrong with the book. These bits read like
    encyclopedia entries, devoid of soul or personality, so generic as
    to be inconsequential, as if Frey has no interest or engagement in
    what he has chosen to write about.

    That's the issue with "Bright Shiny Morning" -- or one of them,
    anyway. Frey seems to know little about Los Angeles and to have
    no interest in it as a real place where people wrestle with actual
    life. There are obligatory riffs on freeways and natural disasters
    and a chapter on visual artists that lists "the highest price ever
    paid for a piece of their work in a public auction." There are also
    occasional installments of "Fun Facts" about the city, as if to give
    the illusion of a certain depth. Did you know that it is "illegal
    to lick a toad within the city limits of Los Angeles"? Neither did
    I. But I also don't know what this has to do with the larger story
    of the novel, except as another example of L.A. as odd and quirky,
    a territory in which we all "live with Angels and chase their dreams."

    Frey, of course, intends this to be amusing, lighthearted and witty
    in tone. ("Learning fun facts is really an enjoyable, and sometimes
    enlightening process," he writes. "And, of course, it's fun too!!!") It
    comes off as two-dimensional, however, not to mention poorly written
    and conceived -- much like the book's narrative elements.

    Esperanza, a Chicana from East L.A., forgoes a college scholarship
    after being embarrassed at a high school graduation party over the size
    of her thighs. Eventually she takes a job as a maid for a tyrannical
    white woman in Pasadena, only to fall in love with the woman's son.

    That's nothing compared to the story of Dylan and Maddie, two crazy
    kids from Ohio who come to L.A. with only their faith in each other
    to sustain them.

    After nearly 300 pages, living on $20,000 they've stolen from a vicious
    drug-dealing motorcycle gang, Maddie turns to Dylan and says: "You know
    how I read all the gossip magazines while I'm at the pool? . . . And
    they're all about these famous people, actresses and singers and
    models and stuff. . . . Well, I think that I want to be an actress."

    "An actress?" he asks.

    "Yeah, I want to be a movie star."

    How do we reckon with a novel in which the desire to become an actress
    is treated as original and organic, in which the only Mexican American
    character is a maid?

    How do we reckon with a book in which the city is flat
    and lifeless as a stage set, in which Frey uses broad
    generalizations ("Thirty-thousand Persians fleeing the rule of
    the ayatollahs. One-hundred and twenty-five thousand Armenians
    escaping Turkish genocide. Forty-thousand Laotians avoiding
    minefields. Seventy-five thousand Thais none in Bangkok sex shows.") to
    try to animate what his imagination cannot?

    Yes, this is Los Angeles, in the way a cheap Hollywood movie is Los
    Angeles: superficial, a collection of loose impressions that don't
    add up.

    Whatever else his failings as a writer, Frey was once able to move
    his readers; how else do we explain the success of "A Million Little
    Pieces"? It's just one of the ironies of this new book that his
    fictionalized memoir is a better novel than "Bright Shiny Morning"
    could ever hope to be.
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