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Paperback Big Babies Book

ISBN: 0425154572

ISBN13: 9780425154571

Big Babies

A.J. Fleger, an encyclopedia salesman who puts women to sleep, tries to attract the attention of the prettiest girl in the Public Setback Suport group that his brother, Sterling, is attending in hopes... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Identity confusion--family man

Sherwood Kiraly has a dynamite book. This is a coming of age story. AJ Fleger is adopted and has always known this. He writes to his birth mother for the same reason we read about in the press--medical information. He allows that possibly a reunion is a bad idea. AJ has an adopted brother Sterling. It was always clear they were not related by blood. They were persons in an ordinary family. Sadly by the time AJ, Adlai, was a teenager it was dysfunctional. There was an angry father who drank too much. Eventually AJ himself becomes a member of AA. For twelve years he was a sentimental drunk. He scraped paint and sold encyclopedias. The father died in 1983 after a third heart attack. He had mellowed by then. At his funeral AJ found out that Sterling was a job coach. Sobering up was the first accomplishment of AJ's life. His brother Sterling failed in his television debut in the 1970's. In 1990 AJ urged him to join a support group for people who had had public setbacks. AJ accompanies Sterling to a meeting and becomes interested in a singer. She will not commit to a date but tells him she is appearing in a lounge at a ski resort. He ends up falling down the intermediate slope at the resort and his failure to injure himself causes the singer to laugh. He decideds to stay in California to cement the relationship. In subsequent months he meets Abby's family and they marry. Not to soon afterwards there is a daughter, Maggie. Sterling goes back into acting, but mainly as a stunt man. Then Sterling has the misfortune to meet his real family, so-called, (I will not disclose the details of the plot here), and finally seeks to redeem his career and self-esteem by embarking upon a super stunt in Las Vegas on New Year's Eve. The author writes effectively in a plain and funny style.

Irony and Innocence

What kind of comic novel is this? Its modest hero reminisces about his first crush: "I would ride my bike down the hill, past her house, like Tom Sawyer showing off for Becky Thatcher. Now I guess it would be called stalking." That kind:in which every funny line says something about the character, and something about the world we live in. Think of a kinder, gentler Saturday Night Live. Can't do it? Then read this book, and see how a basically decent and sincere guy who never thought he'd amount to anything manages to survive the kind of chaotic childhood and addiction-endangered coming of age that's become all too normal, as well as an ensuing romp through our show biz/support group/merchandised- emotions society, while trying to keep up with his obsessed older brother and grabbing at the brass ring of true love. Sherwood Kiraly's narrator A.J. Fleger guides us in a fast-moving story of excess and coincidence with such irony and innocence that it all seems pretty realistic. (This only gets scary when you think about it later.) Along the way you'll learn a lot about southern California, the genius of Robert Lansing, and be introduced to a Gershwin tune called "Blah Blah Blah. " You might say that this is a book about how to find success on your own terms, in a culture that sets us all up for failure.

This family puts the "fun" in dysfunctional

I really enjoyed this book, and I am not usually one to read humorous novels. The main characters are just the right mix of funny and real that I find myself thinking I'm probably related to some of them. I'll have to check at the next family reunion. Do yourself a favor and read this book.

Big Babies

From the first page until the very last this book satisfies. Hilarious chain of events brings these 2 adopted brothers to a reckoning with themselves during a funny showdown at the end involving Las Vegas, Charles Manson, a cannon, a gun-toting library loather, and some zoned out cult members. Intrigued? Buy the book and kick back.

Big Babies gets big laughs.

While searching the bookstore shelves for another book I wanted, I literally bumped into "Big Babies" by Sherwood Kiraly and boy, am I glad I did! I was in need of a light comedy and this book delivered like nothing I've ever read before. On the first page you'll smile and by the middle of the book you'll be tearing up from laughter because of the main character's quirky view of life and zany encounters. The book is absolutely loveable and the only thing I found wrong with it is that it had to end.
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