Inner Tube

by Hob Broun

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After a family tragedy, a man chases consolation--or is it oblivion?--by traveling through some seedy locales of place and spirit Early on in Hob Broun's second novel, the mother of the unnamed narrator, a failed actress, commits suicide by putting her head through a television. That fact, together with our hero's desire for his ex-girlfriend's older sister, prompts a radical departure as he quits his job cataloging old television shows and sets off on a westward journey. Pursuing solace in show more unlikely places, he embarks on a string of just-as-unlikely romances, including ones with a motel maid and an archaeology professor. But can anything distract him from the painful emptiness within? In the desert, finally free of society, a self-reckoning awaits. Bracing in its vision, Inner Tube is a fearless and often bitingly funny novel about what happens when our civilized veneers are shed. show less

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3 reviews
It's like watching a train wreck shot lovingly by an excellent film director, with grace and color and an inescapable knowledge that disaster is indeed striking as you watch. The narrator, a man determined to blot out his memories and desires, is nevertheless haunted by the details of his life: his parents, his sister, I Love Lucy, first loves, Championship Bowling, Bob Hope specials, his ex-wife, cocktail recipes, Cherry Ames, Stendahl - everything kaleidescoped together as if of equal weight, until nothing weighs anything and everything is discarded. Sometimes it reads like drunken glossolalia, no way to tell what is riff and what is truth - but mesmerizing, all the way. I could not rest until I'd finished.

By the way, the text is show more perhaps unfairly informed by the knowledge of the author's life and death. Paralyzed from the neck down following spinal surgery, he finished the book, and more short stories afterward, using a breathing tube linked to a customized computer, before dying at 37 when his respirator failed. show less
Inner Tube by Hob Broun was his second novel. Broun was born in Manhattan and a graduate of the Dalston school. He attended Reed College in Portland. After the publication of his first novel Odditorium he underwent surgery to remove a spinal tumor. The operation left him paralyzed from the neck down. Using a keyboard operated by expelling air he wrote Inner Tube and a collection of short stories. Twenty-five years ago this December he died at home when his respirator failed.

Inner Tube is listed a novel, but not so much in the traditional sense. I would put it somewhere between a novel and Naked Lunch. It is a series of short chapters all by an unidentified narrator. They tell a story, but not exactly in any special order. It seems more show more like a stream of consciousness that has been shuffled a bit.

What I like about the book is the incredible use of language. Some of the descriptions took me back. I knew exactly what meant and had a vivid image the television with the “wood cabinet and the golden speaker cloth.” I know this television. We had it in our living room in the 1970s. I remember the weave and the irregular thread of the cloth that made that cover. I even remember the Zenith logo affixed to the cloth. His mention of a small cactus spine that worked its way into his hand had me searching my hands. The spines that are so small and transparent that you cannot see them, but only feel the in it is irritation in a general area. I lived through that feeling much more often than I would have liked to. Other simple sentences bring a wealth of imagery: “The sunset, laced with hydrocarbons, was a deep purple.” or the more crude, “Breakfast cereal arrived in my duodenum like bark chips.” His longer sentences can also bring that imagery to almost art:

A boiling mass of ocean miniaturized, tightened in a square. Color-coded, like the iodopsin-secreting cone cells of the human retina, 900,000 phosphor dots twitch and fluoresce on the aluminized screen. And I watch, under siege. Electron guns, red, blue, and green, fire information particles, their inexhaustible ammunition, at 167 miles an hour. Weaponry controls and commands. So I watch.

Although the story seems a bit jumbled, I was intrigued by the short chapters and they all held my interest and obliged me to read on. Perhaps I was too caught up in the details to see the big picture. Nonetheless, I was mesmerized by the book. I have read some other reviews and yes, there is a story that can be followed. Perhaps it is like a painting where you are caught up in the shading, use of color, and perspective and forget the subject of the painting because it is just the means to showcase the true art. I am not usually one to rain praises on contemporary fiction as something that has potential to live on or as something that will still be considered great in twenty or fifty years, but I think Inner Tube will make that cut. Sometimes it nice not seeing the forest for the trees.
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Broun could flat-out write. It's hard to believe that with books as good as Inner Tube, plus his intriguing back story, that he was out of print for so long.

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Romance
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3552 .R6824 .I56Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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49
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615,035
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.73)
Languages
English
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Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4
ASINs
1