Calling for Charlie Barnes

352 pages

English language

Published Dec. 21, 2021 by Little Brown & Company.

ISBN:
978-0-316-33353-5
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4 stars (2 reviews)

4 editions

Review of 'Calling for Charlie Barnes' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Charlie Barnes is a stereotypical Boomer: Narcisisstic, incapable of self-reflection, steadfast in his belief that the world owes him unearned greatness. Yet he turns out to be a reminder that, unlike characters in a book, none of us are stereotypes — we are all complex humans who contain multitudes, and getting to the “truth” of who someone is isn’t as easy as it seems. I found the first 3/4 of this novel a bit tedious, but the payoff of the last 1/4 redeemed it. As the narrator, Jake Barnes, notes:"Real life makes for good novels because it's lived as a bunch of lies, and because fictions of one kind or another are the only things worth living for."

Review of 'Calling for Charlie Barnes' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This clever novel starts out masquerading as pure comedy, before morphing into a more serious drama about an unusually fractured family. The narrator is Jake Barnes, who has his own particular origin story that the reader learns about in careful installments. Then, towards the end, Jake the writer looks upon what he has written, and the story becomes the story of the story of Charles Barnes, a metastory.

Let me back up, though. Charles Barnes has been married multiple times, tried on many lives, involving some hilarious get-rich-quick schemes. However, poor Chuck’s general direction, financially, is downward, owing to the funny, delusional choices he makes. At the age of sixty-eight, he has four children, with whom he has complicated relationships, owing to divorcing their mothers and finally settling down with a woman none of them like. Oh, I should mention that these wives have Dickensian last names. That’s a nice …