I think it should be "What's Eating Randy Lenz." And re: Lenz's mom on the bus -- I've never been able to decide if I'm supposed to take this as her true fate, since Lenz flat out lies about so much while monologuing to Bruce Green, from his martial arts abilities to Joelle as a cyclops and on and on... That said, every time I've read that scene, I find myself, like so many other scenes in the book, most acutely feeling the sort of mortified vaguely empathetic horror at her situation. Now, I will admit to being capable of a little bit of this feeling pretty easily for most of the victims of the hyperbolic side-stories we are given, but while that may just be me in some of these cases, I continue to think that it is one of the odd things DFW keeps trying to pull off: tell a hyperbolic story that in other hands might be just an over the top joke but that he chooses to tell in a way that points our attention to the subjective horror of the victim of the story. Lenz' mom as an example is an odd one, given who is telling the story, yet that twist of attention is still there for me.
I just thought of an odd possibly parallell example done well by another writer -- if anyone has read "Generation X," there is a wonderful dream one of the characters tells where he is behind an obese man in a supermarket line and thinking, in passing, witty, kinda mean things about him. Then WWIII starts, with the bombs in the air, and the fat man insists on calmly paying for his purchases, stating that he had always told himself that, when the end came, he would act with dignity -- one of those beautiful little moments of reversal of the reader's perspective/sympathies, as well as of the whole context of the story, that can be such finds.
Last edited by doubtful geste on Tue Aug 25, 2009 1:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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