Customer Reviews for

Lowboy

Average Rating 3.5
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  • Posted June 19, 2009

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    A wonderful dark tale of family, imagination, and urban mythology.

    A fairly quick but still thought-provoking read, Lowboy is part family drama, part exploration of mental illness and subjective reality, and part examination of New York City - in particular, its subway system - as a layered and mysterious breeding ground for impossible myths that intrude upon the real world.

    There are a lot of critics, writing teachers, and others who complain about "unreliable narrators" especially when it comes to the mentally ill, and this book is an excellent example of why those complaints shouldn't be taken too seriously. There are three central characters in this book, and none of their perceptions of reality can really be trusted as objective, though there are of course varying degrees. But the conflicting and yet overlapping worlds these characters live in - and the ability of the city itself to ill in the gaps and make any perception "true" - is fascinating to watch as the story unfolds.

    Anyone looking for more technical or historically accurate portrayals of the underground should probably look elsewhere, because while much of this book takes place in the tunnels underneath NYC, it's much more the subway system of urban myth than one of reality, with some additions of Wray's own such as a non-existent underground river running across Manhattan. But because of its very strong connections to the true atmosphere of the place the book has a way of making even the more improbable underground scenes feel like potential everyday events.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 6, 2010

    lowboy

    dark, depressing and sad. gives insight to mental illness and the toll it takes on family, society and the person themselves.

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  • Posted May 5, 2010

    Profoundly Disappointing Page-Turner

    I so wanted to love this book. I wanted it all the way to the end. And yet when I arrived my gut said, "I told you so."

    There are so many things to recommend the novel, I'll list them before saying anything else. First of all, the writing is excellent. The characters are also fantastic; it's hard to say which I liked best. Wray's depiction of a mind in the grip of mental illness (particulars left unnamed to avoid spoilers) is impressive. And, finally, Wray paints the landscape underneath New York City as beautifully as does Woody Allen aboveground. Truly, he's made a valentine to the NYC subway system.

    Unfortunately, the "big secret" revealed at the end was no surprise to me: the hints had felt so heavy-handed, I'd guessed it at least a third of the way through. In retrospect, then, the pace is annoyingly slow. Finally, Wray's choice for the protagonist's obsession is profoundly disappointing: it dates the novel in such a way that the obsession will soon acquire an interpretation that seems unintended. It already feels "so last decade"!

    All that said, if you like discovering talented new writers, this book might be for you. A very quick read, it will give you a taste of a new author whose work may be well worth pursuing.

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  • Posted January 19, 2010

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    An interesting idea

    Interesting book. The story of a schizophrenic 16 year old boy, who escapes from his 'school' (hospital ward) and takes to the subways of New York City to do what he needs to do. That is to stop global warming!

    The story read fairly easily, written in a stream of consciousness style that fit Lowboy's thought processes. Unfortunately, by the last third of the story, it became tedious and the plot lost stem. There is mention of a major plot twist toward the end, so I kept reading. Boy, was I underwhelmed! The twist had very little to do with any plot development and was not worth the wait.

    Now this is not to say the whole experience was tedious. Far from it. Lowboy's travels from early home life, the onset of his mental illness and the circumstances surrounding his hospital confinement were done very well. It just seemed the story bogged down toward the end.

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  • Posted May 30, 2009

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    A Tremendous Book About A Schizophrenic Adolescent

    This is a brilliant book about a schizophrenic adolescent who has run away from a psychiatric facility. A detective and his mother are looking for him. The chapters are juxtaposed between those from his voice and perspective and those from the voice and perspective of his mother and the detective.

    I have never read a book that so accurately gets into the mind of a schizophrenic. As a clinical social worker who often works with the seriously and chronically mentally ill, I can say with surety that John Wray gets it.

    The book is mesmerizing and difficult to put down. Lowboy, nickname for the protagonist, loves subways and he is riding underneath the bowels of Manhattan trying to keep one step ahead for the real and imagined enemies that are following him. Meanwhile, as his mother and the detective search for him, they are developing a relationship of their own.

    I am not a fast reader but I read this book in two days and bought three more copies to give to friends. It is a rare and wonderful find. John Wray's writing is brilliant.

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  • Posted March 26, 2009

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    A journey through a city and the mind of a troubled teenager

    Reading a book that places you in the mind of a schizophrenic can be a disturbing experience. Particularly when done with skill and subtlety. Even more so when it isn't to dramatize mental disturbance so much as to dramatize the world around the mentally disturbed.

    Wray's Lowboy is a story of a teenage schizophrenic as he is pursued by an emotionally isolated detective, and his bizarrely possessive mother. Lowboy's name is derived from two facts. First, his mental illness and the medications he takes for them suppress his sense of aliveness. Second, he has a particular fascination with the subway system. In fact, he barely surfaces, a them I will touch upon below.

    The story begins with Lowboy just released from his mental institute - he is off his meds and riding the train, convinced that he has to fulfill a mission: the world is set for destruction from global warming within 24 hours. Lowboy's idea of what he must do to save the world becomes the dramatic lynchpin of the story, and to say what it is would deny the reader of subtly unfolded plot point that doesn't become shocking until it's almost too late.

    Wray handles narrative shifts from the point of view of lucid characters, such as the detective on his case, to the wobbly subjectivity of Lowboy's mother, to Lowboy's askew yet insightful view of the world through schizophrenic eyes. It takes skill and finesse to tell the tale of a mad teengager from both outside and within his perspective without taking easy bait of dramatics.

    A fascinating device used by Wray is the juxtaposition of the world of the subway to the street level world. Interestingly, Lowboy is safest in the subway, whereas the only harm that befalls him takes place on the rare occasion that he emerges. I think it's fair to say that Wray wants to embed a moral here: though we relegate the disturbed to the submerged world of a major city, it might be the case that they are more civilized and gentle than the sane general population. It would be an exaggeration to say that this is Wray's main point, but nonetheless, it is a powerful sub-theme that permeates the mood of the story.

    Wray also gives us four wonderful characters. Besides Lowyboy, there is the hard to pin down mother as well as the righteous yet just as difficult to pin down detective. Marvelously, each is hard to get a hold of because of the polar opposites they occupy: mentally unstable vs. mentally rigorous. Last, Wray's great character is New York City itself - Wray allows the city to unfold through the character's various observations as well as in conveying small details, such as during a pursuit on foot on the West Side of Manhattan. The story of Lowboy would be less successful without this city looming in the background.

    In all, Wray has possibly given us a modern classic.

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    Posted April 28, 2011

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    Posted March 22, 2011

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    Posted April 25, 2011

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    Posted June 25, 2009

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    Posted December 27, 2010

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    Posted November 11, 2010

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    Posted March 31, 2009

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    Posted March 4, 2011

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