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friedchickensuicide's review against another edition
4.0
I read this slim 200-page volume in a single sitting, in a sort of overnight frenzy which I usually reserve for a new Stephen King book. I haven't read many campus novels, except for some Ruskin Bond and some of those Children's Book Trust paperbacks in Hindi during my school years. This book has made me nostalgic for that time of my life, which I'm sure is a common side effect of consuming this kind of literature. What surprised about this book is that it contains one of the most convincing critiques of Ayn Rand's writing that I have ever read, a devastating takedown that works because of its brilliant mixture of sharp intellect and mundane human emotion, qualities sorely lacking in Rand's reactionary, one-dimensional politics. The scenes with Robert Frost and Ayn Rand are unforgettable and so is the Hemingway interview. My only problem with the book is that after the narrative moves on from the school days, it turns into a series of vignettes, of largely disconnected scenes of the narrator's adult life. They are interesting, but a pale shadow of everything that came before. But a great book nonetheless.
brig_berthold's review against another edition
emotional
funny
reflective
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
4.25
This was a beautiful story. Terrific writing.
lori85's review against another edition
4.0
The unnamed narrator is a senior (or "sixth former") on scholarship at an elite boys' prep school somewhere in New England. It is 1960-61. The school is noted for both its pretensions to meritocracy and strong identification with literature. Several times a year they play host to a Great Author and there is an accompanying writing contest for a one-on-one audience. (This year, they will be visited by Robert Frost, Ayn Rand, and Earnest Hemingway.) Naturally enough, the narrator has strong literary ambitions of his own and, with graduation on the horizon, wants nothing more than to win and have a chance to speak with a legend of the field. Meanwhile, he is increasingly aware of the illusionary bubble that encases the school's culture and all the things left unsaid to prop up the dream. Hard lessons will be learned when reality makes its inevitable intrusion.
The school is a transplanted Oxford vision (or Ralph Lauren ad) of old bricks laced with ivy, rolling green hills, tweed, tradition, and tea. Its scholarly, über-prep atmosphere is timeless and could fit easily on either side of the Atlantic at any time within the past century and a half. Everything revolves around literature, and the boys spend most of their academic hours arguing with their "masters" about this or that poem or novel. Non-English teaches are relegated to the fringes. Despite the seniors' reflections on impending adulthood and the close of this educational stage, there is remarkably little anxiety about their futures. After all, with this school on their resume and the wealth and status enjoyed by most of their families, their solitary preoccupation with literature is, despite all efforts to pretend otherwise, a striking mark of class, gender, and racial privilege. (They are genuine, honest-to-god WASPs. The 100% real thing.) Although any bibliophile would certainly love to spend a few days in this place, I suspect the stuffiness - reminiscent of a wood-paneled library chock-full of dusty old volumes - would eventually become oppressive.
The year this story takes place in is no accident. Like the characters of Mad Men, these boys are about to emerge into a world of tumultuous changes whose distant rumbles are being heard even among themselves. The subtle exclusion of the Jewish students, for example, seems to foreshadow the increased diversification of previously restricted spaces. Feminism and the Vietnam War make their entrance in the final two chapters.
The narrator himself has some Jewish background in his family, although he himself is not Jewish. Issues of identity are beginning to trouble him, however, and in the era before widespread multiculturalism in both and life and literature, he lacks the conceptual framework to write his own story. What ends up landing him in hot water is basically the effects of conformity in the conservative, old-money monastery that is his school. The arrival on campus of some fireman due to a small, accidental blaze inspires a moment of long-buried self-awareness:
He later admits that this role of Shabby Prep he has adopted is not his own - it is merely a signifier of his identification with an elite institution he could never have afforded without his scholarship. The primary theme of Old School is how the writer finds their voice and the influence of other writers in the process. When the narrator comes across a story that reflects his own experiences, that truly speaks to him as a working class individual of Jewish background surrounded by Anglo-Saxon wealth, the vertiginous happiness at such a discovery, combined with the impending arrival of Hemingway and the chance to meet with him if I win this contest, results in the narrator committing, ironically, the Mortal Sin of Writing.
Old School is one of the most readable books I have come across in some time. It is vivid and profound, yet holds the readers interest and flies by quickly.
Original Review
The school is a transplanted Oxford vision (or Ralph Lauren ad) of old bricks laced with ivy, rolling green hills, tweed, tradition, and tea. Its scholarly, über-prep atmosphere is timeless and could fit easily on either side of the Atlantic at any time within the past century and a half. Everything revolves around literature, and the boys spend most of their academic hours arguing with their "masters" about this or that poem or novel. Non-English teaches are relegated to the fringes. Despite the seniors' reflections on impending adulthood and the close of this educational stage, there is remarkably little anxiety about their futures. After all, with this school on their resume and the wealth and status enjoyed by most of their families, their solitary preoccupation with literature is, despite all efforts to pretend otherwise, a striking mark of class, gender, and racial privilege. (They are genuine, honest-to-god WASPs. The 100% real thing.) Although any bibliophile would certainly love to spend a few days in this place, I suspect the stuffiness - reminiscent of a wood-paneled library chock-full of dusty old volumes - would eventually become oppressive.
The year this story takes place in is no accident. Like the characters of Mad Men, these boys are about to emerge into a world of tumultuous changes whose distant rumbles are being heard even among themselves. The subtle exclusion of the Jewish students, for example, seems to foreshadow the increased diversification of previously restricted spaces. Feminism and the Vietnam War make their entrance in the final two chapters.
The narrator himself has some Jewish background in his family, although he himself is not Jewish. Issues of identity are beginning to trouble him, however, and in the era before widespread multiculturalism in both and life and literature, he lacks the conceptual framework to write his own story. What ends up landing him in hot water is basically the effects of conformity in the conservative, old-money monastery that is his school. The arrival on campus of some fireman due to a small, accidental blaze inspires a moment of long-buried self-awareness:
For a moment I saw this place as I had first seen it: how beautiful it was, and how odd. I felt its seclusion and how we'd come to resemble each other in that seclusion. We dressed so much alike that the inflections we did allow ourselves - tasseled loafers for the playboy, a black turtleneck for the rebel - were probably invisible to an outsider. Our clothes, the way we wore our hair, the very set of our mouths, all this marked us like tribal tattoos.
He later admits that this role of Shabby Prep he has adopted is not his own - it is merely a signifier of his identification with an elite institution he could never have afforded without his scholarship. The primary theme of Old School is how the writer finds their voice and the influence of other writers in the process. When the narrator comes across a story that reflects his own experiences, that truly speaks to him as a working class individual of Jewish background surrounded by Anglo-Saxon wealth, the vertiginous happiness at such a discovery, combined with the impending arrival of Hemingway and the chance to meet with him if I win this contest, results in the narrator committing, ironically, the Mortal Sin of Writing.
Old School is one of the most readable books I have come across in some time. It is vivid and profound, yet holds the readers interest and flies by quickly.
Original Review
bananabell's review against another edition
5.0
Dammit a true book!!!! Should be a classic . Explorations of perception , infatuation, honesty & an ode to atmosphere and literature itself. Most magical and imaginative (original!!!!) even whilst knocking that dream off the pedestal multiple times in a most unglorious fashion. Also an actual plot and character development!!! Hmm what
I did notice this time around there are some plot points that seem a little contrived but not to the point where they seem completely implausible. Gosh this was one of the best things I got out of AP lit.
**addition on 1/16: this book got to me because it touched upon the spiritual. The avenue was through the concept of writing.
‘I wanted to be anointed.’
I did notice this time around there are some plot points that seem a little contrived but not to the point where they seem completely implausible. Gosh this was one of the best things I got out of AP lit.
**addition on 1/16: this book got to me because it touched upon the spiritual. The avenue was through the concept of writing.
‘I wanted to be anointed.’
lizneuner's review against another edition
reflective
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.0
allmyexistentialcrises's review against another edition
emotional
mysterious
reflective
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
2.0
kirsten0929's review against another edition
3.0
[2003] Strange book, this one. I liked it but not as much as I expected to. Takes place in a boys boarding school/prep school, where unlike many books in this setting, the faculty and the pupils seem to generally like each other and get along. I found that unexpected and refreshing. But strangely, I thought, much of the story was dedicated to talking about the guest authors who were invited to the school. First, Robert Frost, then even more about Ayn Rand (the main character’s fascination with the love affair of the two main characters in her book The Fountainhead and his not understanding the rest of it (which, incidentally, was my experience)), then even more about Ernest Hemingway. The main event occurs over two thirds of the way through the book, which feels latish and makes the rest of the book feel rushed, and I think the main event was interesting and could have used a little more exploration. Then we skip to the main character in middle age where he runs into one of the teachers from school, who then fills him in on what happened to the headmaster in the intervening years. Felt kind of tacked on and I felt kind of cheated to have everything relayed to me in that way. Also, I really liked the writing but at around the time of the main event it felt like the author turned it over to a less talented writer to finish it off. So, a little disappointing to finish.
dianareadsalot's review against another edition
3.0
Another one in the read like Rory Gilmore project. A nice short, easy to read story about a young boy in school.
The last chapter was a twist I wasnt expecting.
The last chapter was a twist I wasnt expecting.
fhammond_36's review against another edition
5.0
Interesting story and all the characters feel so real, though it’s not my world. I wonder how much of this is autobiographical. Yes I know it’s a novel and a work of fiction, but he writes them so clearly that you feel their angst and teenage boy drama and competition, as if he knew them all. Anyway I could imagine the movie. A bit Dead Poets Society. I enjoyed it.
Also Ayn Rand!
Also Ayn Rand!