Beautiful Children by Charles Bock

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: January 2008
  • 432pp

    Reader Rating: (9 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2008
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 432pp

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    Remember Ponyboy Curtis? The 14-year-old smart-boy greaser, dreamer, and lover of sunsets was the hero of S. E. Hinton's nearly perfect novel about coming-of-age in late-'60s Oklahoma, The Outsiders, which, thanks to Francis Ford Coppola, survived translation to the screen and became to teenagers growing up in the '80s the generational equivalent of Rebel Without a Cause.

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    Synopsis

    One Saturday night in Las Vegas, twelve-year-old Newell Ewing goes out with a friend and doesn’t come home. As the boy’s distraught parents navigate the mystery of what’s become of their son, the circumstances surrounding Newell’s vanishing and other events on that same night reverberate through the lives of seemingly disconnected strangers: a comic book illustrator in town for a weekend of debauchery; a painfully shy and possibly disturbed young artist; a stripper who imagines moments from her life as if they were movie scenes; a bubbly teenage wiccan anarchist; a dangerous and scheming gutter punk; a band of misfit runaways. These “urban nomads,” each with a past to hide and a pain to nurture, search for salvation as they barrel toward destruction, weaving their way through a neon underworld of sex, drugs, and the spinning wheels of chance.

    The Washington Post - John Burdett

    Beautiful Children is…about the aftermath of war—not merely Iraq, although that is mentioned—but more important "the war of all against all," which seems to have been raging for at least a couple of generations. That war is, as Bock demonstrates, destroying our kids with the demonic ingenuity of modern drugs and technology, not to mention the demise of the family itself. In the no-man's-land of Bock's Vegas there remain only the survival strategies of the hopelessly inept young. I cannot think of another novelist who has dared to attack this most pressing and complex issue so ferociously.

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    Biography

    Charles Bock was born in Las Vegas, Nevada. He has an MFA from Bennington College and has received fellowships from Yaddo, UCross, and the Vermont Studio Center. He lives in New York City. Visit the author’s website at www.beautifulchildren.net.


    From the Hardcover edition.

    Customer Reviews

    God's obligation was his presence within usby Granger

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    December 23, 2008: This book deserves its distinction as one of The New York Times Best Books of 2008. It is well-written and organized in such a way that readers understand these characters as people and not as caricatures. Not only that, but Charles Bock has a keen eye for social critique and many of his characters provide insightful commentary about society as well as a developing sense of their own reasons behind their actions. For example, Lestat appears earlier in the novel and the reader is repelled by him, but later on Bock allows the narrative to pick up Lestat's voice and the inner workings of his mind and suddenly the reader is given a new perspective on this character: "The sane sober businessman does not walk down the street talking out loud to himself, but the crazy homeless man does...Over time Lestat had also grown to understand how the former becomes the latter. How all your thoughts and frustrations can inch closer and closer toward one uninterrupted rant. How the chasm between a person and the world around him can grow, a shell forming between the life you once had and the life you are living." This situation is true for the characters in the novel. Each one is dealing with a chasm that either developed while he/she was consciously or unconsciously oblivious or is coming to terms with the fact that the chasm is developing at that moment, based on a particular decision that needs to be made. This, for me, is the best part of the book--that the philosophy and vision behind it are so satisfying. Who hasn't at times felt like Kenny on the side of the road, raising our hands in the air and wondering "What am I supposed to do now?". I like the nun's answer in this novel: You must question how you might be more than you are. Like Rilke writes in his poem "The Archaic Torso of Apollo," You must change your life. I agree. You must also read this book.

    The Grey Line Tourby KenCady

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    February 13, 2008: Have you ever wondered what happens to the rejects from the Jerry Springer show? The damaged, the destroyed, the sad, the failed folks who couldn't even cut it with America's sleaze fighting show? Neither have I. But Charles Bock has and he doesn't believe that what happens in Vegas stays there, and we're lucky for that. Otherwise we might have missed his brilliant writing, his elegant portrayal, the irony of beautiful children being written about as if they were something other than that. It's a tour of Las Vegas like you will hopefully never see, but if you believe Bock, we are all on that same bus, and it's not always a pretty ride, but one you wouldn't want to miss.


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