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Anthony Swofford follows his international best-seller Jarhead with an unforgettable first novel -- a powerful story about a youth spent on a U.S. air base in Japan and the gritty neon streets just outside it, where the Japanese underworld lurks and a rebellious young girl finds herself in great danger........
Seventeen-year-old Severin Boxx, an earnest, muscular high-school-football star, lives on an American air force base on the outskirts of Tokyo. Severin is mad for Virginia Kindwall, the base general's daughter, who is a hafu -- half American and half Japanese. Beautiful, smart, and utterly defiant of her father, Virginia has become a petty criminal in the Japanese underground.
Severin is soon caught up in Virginia's world, and together they drift through the mad neon landscape outside the walls of the base, near the busy Haijima rail station, a place of movement, anonymity, and sudden disappearance. Exit A is one of its many shadowy doorways. Severin and Virginia fall into trouble way over their heads and are soon subjected to the enormous, unforgiving tensions between America and Japan. Years later, Severin and Virginia remain lost to each other, until an emotionally frayed, thirty- something Severin embarks on a quest to find Virginia -- and the part of himself taken from him when his boyhood abruptly ended.
Darkly irreverent, frankly erotic, at once suspenseful and emotionally overwhelming, Swofford's Exit A builds inexorably toward a climax as it audaciously plumbs the legacies of war, the wish for redemption, and the danger of love..........
Take Your Place, Anthony SwoffordReviewed by Jonathan Posner, 2009-07-10
Yes, take your place amongst America's very finest writers for this
is as good as it gets. There is something exhilarating about being
so in thrall to a writer's skill at plot and characterisation; it
really is breathtaking.
The story of Severin Boxx and Virginia Kindwall, as well as being
one of the utmost complexity, is so dripping in the atmosphere of
time and place that it has a virtually cinematic reach. With it's
piercingly authentic Far Eastern backdrop it's almost impossible
not to conjure up 'Lost in Translation', or even vague
recollections of the military personality from both 'Apocalypse
Now' and 'Mash'. And General Kindwall, Virginia's father, gradually
becomes more real than people you actually know. Now, also, I
understand how it really might be possible to go from hatred to
compassion to redemption in only one lifetime.
And then just look at Swofford's complete mastery of storyline,
swooping and swerving through time, utterly assured whether
covering two weeks over fifty pages or fifteen years over a
hundred. This is a ride you really want to go on and neither do you
want it to end because you're never sure how it's going to get you
to your destination. But you always feel safe in this writer's
hands, a bit like how it must be to be driven across a big city at
breakneck speed, but by a Formula One driver.
I can think of only four other novels of recent times that can sit
with 'Exit A' at this exalted top table: Anthony Doerr's 'About
Grace'; George Hagen's 'The Laments'; Chang-Rae Lee's 'Aloft' and
A.M. Homes's 'This Book Will Save Your Life'. But the truth is, if
I never again read a book as good as this one I don't think I'll
really mind.
it started with promise but could have been much betterReviewed by Akira Touya, 2008-12-18
the first third of the book (part 1) was enjoyable to read and i thought the remainder of the book would be equally as enjoyable but it is unfortunate that it was not. the book has interesting characters and allows the reader to become happily familiar with them and then significantly changes their situation for the remaining two-thirds of the book. i would have rather the author kept writing about their lives when the main characters were teenagers instead of making them grow. and the ending seems a bit abrupt. the parts in japan were cool but the parts in the usa(which were many) were not as fun to read. find it at a library or acquire it some other cheap way, but it is not worth paying the full price for.
An enjoyable but sometimes unbelievable novelReviewed by Ninja Bookworm, 2008-07-01
Having been stationed in Okinawa, I feel the author did a good job
of depicting life on and around a military base (even though it was
at Yokota, on the mainland.) I particulary liked his portrayal of
the general--it was very realistic. Overall, I think the author did
a good job with characterization.
However, I think the novel suffers from trying to cover too many
years. In doing so, the reader misses out on possible important
events (e.g. the years one character spends in prison--this is
taken care of in a page).
And then some implausible events. A character escapes from a North
Korean gang with a girl who has been kidnapped, but she goes (and
stays) at the house of a guy who works with the North Koreans. That
would be the first place they would check. For such a street-wise
girl, this move is just too dumb, incongruent. And a female
professor's boyfriend working as a manual laborer on campus (why
can't he get this job somewhere else?)
For me, the best part was the first part: the teenagers' experience
on and off the air base. Had the author focused on this, I think
the novel could have been better. In short, I think the author
tried to cover to much (time-span wise) in this first novel of
his.
But, the author's writing is excellent and he had me laughing out
loud at times. He gracefully inserts humourous thoughts into the
narrative. So that was well done.
Bland treatmentReviewed by M. Drudzinski, 2008-03-06
I loved the opening two pages of this novel but found it bland
after that. Some readers noted that Exit A presents a unique story
or covers a unique theme, but Swofford doesn't really take the
subject beyond the obvious. We know that there are tensions between
our military personnel and the native populations in the countries
in which our bases are located (the latest rape case in Japan is
just one instance, of course).
Swofford offered me nothing new about military brats or children of
mixed parentage. I could have gotten his take from the nightly
news.
If you want a more sophisticated treatment of this subject, try a
fantastic novel by Don Lee called Country of Origin. It's an
outstanding take on children growing up in the in-between world of
the military, a thought-provoking examination of bastardization and
mixed-race identity and the novel also asks difficult questions
about what it means to be an American.
Scribner NEW Pulp-Fiction!Reviewed by Geoffrey Lowell Wheeler, 2007-11-03
I only finished this novel so that I could write an full and honest review about it. You may notice that this book doesn't come in paperback. There's a reason for that... Once you get the book, you may also notice that ther are NO reviewer praise quots on the dust jacket, in fact, ALL the praise is for JARHEAD! There's a reason for that as well. THIS BOOK SUCKS! Mr....(a Top 1000 Reviewer) makes excelent points (even if his rating is 3-Stars higher) which I will not rehash here. Just read his review. The Bonnie and Clyde theme, lurid subject matter and crude language is pulp fiction at its finest. This IS NOT a compliment. This book feels like it was written at an earlier stage of Mr. Swaffords carreer. A stage which lacked maturity, style, grace and an Iowa Writers Workshop education.