BEg2 chapter 4 moving on from Shawn to Aggro Hour

Mark Kohut mark.kohut at gmail.com
Thu Nov 18 10:52:42 UTC 2021


The language, heartbreaker insurance; the comedy of the satire,
"health-food Cheetos" THAT
is what America tries to do with its food......

The guy can SEE.....our world....as fluently as the writer with those
seeing eyes, Updike, can see.

On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 2:55 AM Michael Bailey <michael.lee.bailey at gmail.com>
wrote:

> But first - we sing! -
>
> https://youtu.be/N5m5EtP6cMo
> (Slight plot connection here, since Maxine is not currently a CFE but still
> plays the part, not completely dissimilar from not really being an
> Inspector General and possibly accomplishing more that way.)
>
> er, ah, well, anyhoo, no song & dance before moving on  - just a quick
> rejoinder to Mark’s comment that
>
> Maxine is the anchored moral center of the novel, flawed as her own
> "morals' intentionally are
> She can catch fraud everywhere. Therefore Shawn is an airhead, which she
> kindly did not want to actually say.
> That matters for the interpretation of what he sees and says.
> Therefore......
>
>
> Or, is it possible that Maxine’s New York sensibility, already affronted by
> Horst’s Midwestern commodities frame of mind, and by a California
> contingent whose value system clashes with her reflexes, is actively
> seeking alternatives to snap-judgement rejection/ridicule even while that
> response offers itself to her out of habit?
>
> Which she shows by not uttering these sentiments - a token gesture, or
> non-gesture, true - and by not quitting emotherapy, a decision involving
> money, a little more puissant.
>
>
>
>
> Still thinking of the TV as the Tube, as in 2001 she’s still probably got a
> CRT in her living room, she provides healthy snacks for Otis and Fiona to
> enjoy as they watch The Aggro Hour.
>
> Watching Fiona, she’s extremely moved by her cuteness. Otis is on his good
> behavior too.
>
> Ages of kids? My guesses:
>
> Ready to be gainsaid. I haven’t much textual evidence as yet.
>
>
> Fiona 11 ?
> Fiona is in that valley between powerhouse kid and unpredictable
> adolescent, having found, long may it wave, an equilibrium that nearly has
> Maxine wiping her nose here, as she considers on what short notice such
> calm can be disrupted.
>
>
>  Otis 12?
>   “You’re sure,” Otis in full being-a-gent mode, “this won’t be too violent
> for you.”
>
> Ziggy 11 or 12?
> a kid who can’t help having some preadolescent longing. If his coeval
> friend is going to Krav Maga with a sitter he can’t be very old, can he?
>
>
>   “Fiona, whose parents actually should consider heartbreaker insurance,
> bats eyelashes possibly enhanced by a raid on her mom’s makeup supplies.
> “You can tell me not to look.”
>            Maxine, recognizing that girlhood technique of pretending
> anybody can tell you anything, slides a bowl of health-food Cheetos in
> front of them, along with two cans of sugar-free soda, and waving Enjoy,
> quits the room.”
>
> Avoidance of sugar may help instances where “such calm can be disrupted.”
>
> Heartbreaker insurance - quickie near-rhyme with “homeowner insurance.”
> --
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>


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