Oh The Glory Of It All: Summary and book reviews of Oh The Glory Of It All by Sean Wilsey, plus links to an excerpt from Oh The Glory Of It All and a biography of Sean Wilsey.
Oh The Glory Of It All
by Sean Wilsey
Hardcover: May 2005,
480 pages.
Paperback: Apr 2006,
496 pages.
"In the beginning we were happy. And we were always excessive. So in
the beginning we were happy to excess." With these opening lines Sean
Wilsey takes us on an exhilarating tour of life in the strangest,
wealthiest, and most grandiose of families.
Sean's blond-bombshell
mother (one of the thinly veiled characters in Armistead Maupin's
bestselling Tales
of the City) is a 1980s society-page staple, regularly
entertaining Black Panthers and movie stars in her marble and glass
penthouse, "eight hundred feet in the air above San Francisco; an
apartment at the top of a building at the top of a hill: full of
light, full of voices, full of windows full of water and bridges and
hills." His enigmatic father uses a jet helicopter to drop Sean off at
the video arcade and lectures his son on proper hygiene in public
restrooms, "You should wash your hands first, before you use the
urinal. Not after. Your penis isn't dirty. But your hands are."
When Sean, "the kind of child who sings songs to sick flowers,"
turns nine years old, his father divorces his mother and marries her
best friend. Sean's life blows apart. His mother first invites him to
commit suicide with her, then has a "vision" of salvation that
requires packing her Louis Vuitton luggage and traveling the globe, a
retinue of multiracial children in tow. Her goal: peace on earth (and
a Nobel Prize). Sean meets Indira Gandhi, Helmut Kohl, Menachem Begin,
and the pope, hoping each one might come back to San Francisco and
persuade his father to rejoin the family. Instead, Sean is pushed out
of San Francisco and sent spiraling through five high schools, till he
finally lands at an unorthodox reform school cum "therapeutic
community," in Italy.
With its multiplicity of settings and kaleidoscopic mix of
preoccupations-sex, Russia, jet helicopters, seismic upheaval,
boarding schools, Middle Earth, skinheads, home improvement, suicide,
skateboarding, Sovietology, public transportation, massage, Christian
fundamentalism, dogs, Texas, global thermonuclear war, truth, evil,
masturbation, hope, Bethlehem, CT, eventual salvation (abridged list)Oh
the Glory of It All is memoir as bildungsroman as explosion.
BOOK REVIEWS
BookBrowse
I have zero interest in reading the gossip columns so the idea of sitting down with an almost 500 page memoir that I thought was going to be about one man's childhood growing up in "high-society" San Francisco held little appeal, but I'd just finished my previous audio book, so popped the first CD of the audio version that the publisher had so presciently sent a few days before into the car stereo - and was sucked in within minutes. This is a very difficult book to describe and I can't do any better than refer you to the book jacket blurb above, which does as good a job as is possible of summarizing this diverse, lacerating and very funny memoir. As always, don't take my word for it - instead read a very substantial excerpt at BookBrowse (which I believe is exclusive to us) and decide for yourself. Full Review (913 words).
Media Reviews
Library Journal - Ronald Ray Ratliff
Wilsey details the trials of his particular brand of teenage life in an engrossing, entertaining, and often hilarious memoir that is sure to be in high demand.
Booklist - John Green
The story raises a lot of questions that never get answered, but maybe only because there's so much to tell--as Wilsey writes, he wants to capture "the glory of it all." Although this sprawling memoir could have withstood some cuts, Wilsey accomplishes that goal to a startling degree.
Kirkus Reviews
Only in his later years does the focus of Wilsey's self-lacerating style soften somewhat-he's not a writer you want to see mellow-but it's a small complaint. Honest to a fault, richly veined with indelible images: a monumental piece of work.
The New York Times - Michiko Kakutani
... in dire need of some industrial-strength editing, but at the same time, an epic performance: by turns heartfelt, absurd, self-indulgent, self-abasing, silly and genuinely moving.
Armistead Maupin
Sean Wilsey's magnificent memoir spares no one but forgives almost
everything; it's a kindly act of retribution that's sure to ring a bell with any
adult survivor of parental narcissism. A bell, hell. Oh the Glory of It All
becomes a veritable carillon of remembered pain, never once losing its wise and
worldly sense of humor. I couldn't stop reading the damn thing.
George Saunders
Exuberant, honest, and unforgettable. Wilsey shows that great privilege
doesn't guarantee bliss, but also doesn't preclude it. I'm glad he survived this
odd/epic youth and emerged from it such a sane, generous, and funny narrator. My
only regret is that he's not older than he is, since there would be more to
read.
Recent Reader Reviews
Rated of 5
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