Sabtu, 04 Oktober 2014

A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier

A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier

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A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier

A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier



A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier

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At age twelve, Kevin Brockmeier is ready to become a different person: not the boy he has always been—the one who cries too easily and laughs too easily, who lives in an otherland of sparkling daydreams and imaginary catastrophes—but someone else altogether. Over the course of one school year—seventh grade—he sets out in search of himself. Along the way, he happens into his first kiss at a church party, struggles to understand why his old friends tease him at the lunch table, becomes the talk of the entire school thanks to his Halloween costume, and booby-traps his lunch to deter a thief. With the same deep feeling and oddly dreamlike precision that are the hallmarks of his fiction, the acclaimed novelist now explores the dream of his own past and recovers the person he used to be.

From the Hardcover edition.

A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1158140 in Books
  • Brand: Brockmeier, Kevin
  • Published on: 2015-03-03
  • Released on: 2015-03-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.03" h x .60" w x 5.17" l, .81 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 208 pages
A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier

From Booklist In three acclaimed novels and two story collections, Brockmeier (The Illumination, 2011) earned his reputation as a literary virtuoso attuned to the illusory facets of everyday life. His rollicking first memoir, centered on his formative year in the seventh grade, affirms his talents and explores their foundations. Twelve-year-old Kevin kicks off the school year eavesdropping on a crush and becoming the butt of jokes during an all-school weekend sleepaway, initiating a turbulent year in which he determines he’s a Night Court guy, shows up at his Christian school dressed as Dolly Parton for Halloween, discovers the possibilities of literature, and tastes the brief satisfaction of celebrity after staging a play. Narrating in feverish third-person prose that accentuates his clumsy steps toward adulthood, Brockmeier examines the false intimacy of first kisses, the variable definitions of “best friend,” the unexpected ways jokes can escalate, and the absurd lengths one sometimes goes to impress others. In a hilariously vivid, novelistic chronicle of the mid–1980s, Brockmeier nails the awkward triumphs and life-affirming disasters of teenagedom, revealing the creative significance of what might otherwise seem banal. --Jonathan Fullmer

Review “Filmstrip is a funny, poignant oddity. . . . There's something here for you as long as you remember being 12, having disloyal friends, and wondering when the opposite sex was going to discover how cool you were. . . . The prose is always a pleasure, and our little underdog hero is so likable that you're relieved just to be holding the book in your hands: It's proof that he turned out okay. A-” —Entertainment Weekly“Brockmeier’s evocative, gracefully written memoir so beautifully captures a slice of our lives many may be tempted to write about, but few want to remember. . . . Brockmeier also does an excellent job anchoring his memoir in time without limiting its appeal only to those who came of age in that decade. In his fiction, Brockmeier has shown he’s a versatile prose stylist, and he makes the transition to memoir without sacrificing that quality. . . . Lovely.” —Bookreporter “Masterful. . . . This is painful stuff—and important and beautifully written stuff, in Brockmeier’s hands—worthy of your time and attention. It’s insightful, relayed at a propulsive clip, and captures the complicated inner life of a seventh grader with more unflinching precision than anything you’ll read on the subject. This book will help you.” —Biographile   “A delicately rendered memoir that bathes the invariably painful past in a kind of gold-glowing tenderness. . . . There are plenty of memoirs that recount extraordinary circumstances and adventures, but I cannot think of one that so magically involves us in an exploration of the commonplace. A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip is a look back—not in vengeance, anger or even gloating—but in wonder at the miraculous variety of experience, and the ways we come to be ourselves.” —Arkansas Democrat-Gazette   “Beautifully written. . . . The books rings awfully true . . . Brockmeier’s potent, honest prose makes for a vivid, funny and achingly familiar read.” —Arkansas Times"Funny, gripping, and heartbreaking." —Rain Taxi Review of Books “Every book by Kevin Brockmeier is unsettling, strange, and impossible to forget. . . . He challenges the way we see the world. His latest, A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip, catapults us all back to middle school with time-machine perfection. . . . Heartbreakingly honest.” —Caroline Leavitt, bestselling author of Is This Tomorrow and Pictures of You“In three acclaimed novels and two story collections, Brockmeier earned his reputation as a literary virtuoso attuned to the illusory facets of everyday life. His rollicking first memoir, centered on his formative year in the seventh grade, affirms his talents and explores their foundations. . . . In a hilariously vivid, novelistic chronicle of the mid-1980s, Brockmeier nails the awkward triumphs and life-affirming disasters of teenagedom, revealing the creative significance of what might otherwise seem banal.”—Jonathan Fullmer, Booklist“A truly stunning hybrid—a memoir told with the imaginative vibrancy and the uncanny precision of the best fiction. This book will floor you, and flood you with a torrent of your own memories from the terrifying, electric threshold between childhood and adulthood. If you're new to his work, this is a phenomenal place to start.”—Karen Russell, bestselling author of Swamplandia! and Vampires in the Lemon Grove “Brockmeier is surely one of our great writers. Here seventh grade is rendered in such lovingly vivid detail—the year is so perfectly remembered—that you feel, after reading it, that the memory in fact belongs to you. I loved it.”—Ethan Rutherford, author of The Peripatetic CoffinFrom the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

In addition to A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip, KEVIN BROCKMEIER is the author of the novels The Illumination, The Brief History of the Dead, and The Truth About Celia; the story collections Things That Fall from the Sky and The View from the Seventh Layer; and the children’s novels City of Names and Grooves: A Kind of Mystery. His work has been translated into seventeen languages. He has published his stories in such venues as The New Yorker, The Georgia Review, McSweeney’s, Zoetrope, Tin House, The Oxford American, The Best American Short Stories, The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror, and New Stories from the South. He has recieved the Borders Original Voices Award, three O. Henry Awards (one, a first prize), the PEN USA Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and an NEA Grant. In 2007, he was named one of Granta magazine’s Best Young American Novelists. He teaches frequently at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and he lives in Little Rock, Arkansas, where he was raised.


A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A Memoir of Seventh Grade, by Kevin Brockmeier

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Most helpful customer reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful. A Short and Breathtakingly Beautiful Memoir By Sally B. Owen Boys? Seventh Grade? Not subjects I care much about at my rather advanced age. However, Kevin Brockmeier is a favorite author of mine, so this book was a "must read" for me.Kevin's memories of his year are haunting. I expected them to be well-written but I was taken by surprise by how moved I was and how much I cared about Kevin and his experience of this sometimes difficult age. His descriptions of the verbal cruelty that can be inflicted by our peers are painful. Brockmeier is a talented, sensitive writer, no matter what the subject. I consider him one of the best writers at work today.I highly recommend this book if you are male or female and have ever been in seventh grade.

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful. Worth reading for some truly beautiful, evocative, and poignant moments, but somewhat overly long By B. Capossere Ahh, seventh grade. There are not a lot of people, at least among those I know, who would choose to go back to that time in their lives. Kevin Brockmeier, though, decides to brave that very journey in his new work: A Few Seconds of Radiant Filmstrip: A memoir of seventh grade. Unfortunately, while there are some beautiful moments in here, and some wonderful passages, there wasn’t quite enough here to justify an entire book in my mind. Even if it is a slim book, coming in at under 200 pages.The memoir does exactly what it promises, taking us via third-person narration from just before young Kevin’s seventh grade starts and closing at the very end of the year. In between, we’re treated to many of the scenes that comprise the reasons most people don’t want to go back.• The fear of always being one step (or more) out of touch: stickers used to be in, now they are not. Check.• The embarrassment of saying the wrong thing: “But when Kevin makes the announcement, the others laugh and say, ‘Snack time?’ and ‘Hey, it’s time for snacks everyone, “ . . . until the drums in his head go click-click-click and snack time is safely stored away, added to the list of things it is impermissible to acknowledge or say.”• The hierarchies of fashion: “Holes are cooler than no holes, buttons are cooler than zippers. Levi’s are cooler than Lees, Lees are cooler than Wranglers, and Wranglers are cooler than Toughskins. It has taken him longer than average, but he is learning.”• The aching desire to nail down just who you are: “If only he could remember . . . his life would fit together without a single missing piece. Would snap flat and turn into a picture. Would look the way it does on the box.”• And in the most painful sections, the bullying, both physical—almost worse for its small-bore nature—and the mental, the name-calling, the repeating of phrases, the nicknames.Brockmeier does a sharply vivid job of conveying all these and other horrible moments, but it isn’t all fear and trembling. Or, sometimes there is trembling, but of another sort, the kind that comes at the merest glimpse of the right girl, at the merest flavor of an unintentional touch—a jeans-clothed thigh brushing past a jeans-clothed thigh. Or the way a reader can dive headlong into a book, and the joy of sharing that love. The oasis an empathic, compassionate teacher can be in a desert world of adolescence. The sense of creative triumph at the completion of a story, a play, a song; triumph magnified by the kind praise of others, by the response of an actual audience. All of these scenes orbit around a pivotal, central chapter in which young Kevin is faced with his future and has to make a profound and poignant choice.Many people will recognize this version of seventh grade, and that is both a testament to Brockmeier’s skill in bringing it alive, but also a bit of a curse for the reader, as it feels at times, too often really, a bit too familiar, leading to a desire for the author to “tell me something I don’t already know or haven’t already experienced myself.” How Brockmeier says what he says can be beautiful and haunting at times, but what he is telling us can be all too prosaic and mundane. This becomes even more of a bind in the bullying section, where we get a lot (and I mean a lot) of teen speak and annoying verbal taunting. On the one hand, the longer this goes on, the worse you feel for young Kevin and it really does create that sense of “make it stop!” On the other hand, it really does create that sense of “make it stop!” I mean, teen speak is neither lovely nor profound, and when it’s meant to purposely annoy, it’s, well, annoying. It’s a fine line to walk between creating the effect and putting the reader off, and I’m not sure Brockmeier balanced it just right here.Given my druthers, I’d have preferred an even slimmer volume, something maybe half this length, to get rid of some of the more mundane aspects and highlight the other ones, but still allow room for flights of linguistic fancy. As it is, it felt over long, with some pacing problems due to several lagging sections. Being a short book, it isn’t like it’s a burdensome time requirement, so I think it still worth reading for the many very strong parts, for the moments and emotions he captures so perfectly and poetically. I just wish the times in between those moments weren’t quite so long. Recommended with caveats.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Middle School Boys By H. A Truett I read the description of this book and thought, "Yes, a way to get inside the head of my twelve-year-old son." He's been home schooled for 3 years and will soon return to public school for 7th grade. Having been a girl in 7th grade (ha ha), I don't know much about what middle school is like for boys.My first reaction to this book, as I finished the first chapter, was: "Oh God, no, I was wrong, I don't want to be inside my son's head. If this is in his head, I am better off ignorant."Cause, really, twelve-year-old boys seem overly preoccupied with penises and swear words.So I gave up on the idea of getting inside my own kid's head and read this for it's own sake, as a good book where a character grows and changes over the course of the story. And I loved it. So many of the scenes took me back to Hopkins Middle School, being teased and tormented in ways I didn't even know how to put into words. Kids know how to make you miserable while looking like your friend. Friends sometimes seem like they want to make you miserable and you cannot tell where you stand with them at all. Good ideas turn into humiliations and humiliations somehow shape who you become.Thank you, Kevin, for this open and honest memoir of 7th grade I salute you.

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