An Enriching Sequel to BEGINNER'S LUKE
Janet Pearson for Apex Reviews, Durham, North Carolina
THE TOY BUDDHA, Book II of the BEGINNER'S LUKE Series, picks up where its predecessor left off: with the fearless Luke
Soloman continuing his trek down the Experience Trail. In this
compelling set of adventures, though, Luke's journey is as much
physical as it is metaphysical.
At
a festive Halloween party hosted by his imaginary friend, Billy,
Soloman trips out on acid. At the height of his delirium, Soloman
witnesses a glowing Buddha statue passing nearby, but its significance
seems, well, insignificant, and Soloman writes off the experience as
per the typical side effects of a bad acid trip.
Time
goes on, and Soloman's inward quest for self-discovery takes a few
quirky turns: he mysteriously grows six inches overnight, begins
playing basketball regularly, and, inevitably has his heart broken by
both his heart's one true desire, Vanessa, and his trusted imaginary
friend. In the midst of his emotional grief, he witnesses the Buddha
once again only this time the statue actually speaks to him, offering
only the following terse axiom:
"You can't travel the path 'til you've become the path."
Before
he has a chance to delve the depths of the statement, Soloman suffers a
near fatal accident After he awakens from a dream-filled stupor, he
reconciles with his friend and beloved, begins to mend, and eventually
enjoys the pleasures he has heretofore only imagined with the lovely
Vanessa. Unable to deny the significance of the Buddha's recurrence in
his life, though, Soloman soon ventures off again, on a continued
search for even deeper meaning--if there is any at all.
THE TOY BUDDHA is an enriching sequel to BEGINNER'S LUKE,
helping to further define the original tome, as well as make its
mission that much more clear. Luckman's writing continues to be
emboldened by his charged plunges into the abstract, and his playful,
yet sincere, treatment of the ethereal continues to make for an
enlightening read. If Book III of this engaging six-part series is
anything like its progenitors, Luckman's cadre of devoted readers is
destined to only grow.
Request your FREE copy of THE TOY BUDDHA today!
Alyce Mooreland, Los Angeles, California
I told myself I wasn't going to write a second review of the BEGINNER'S LUKE Series, by my old buddy Sol Luckman, but here I am again after being thoroughly taken by Book II, THE TOY BUDDHA.
Part
of what I am is just plain nostalgic for my undergrad days in Chapel
Hill, which Luckman calls in mock-homage to Thomas Wolfe Pulpit Hill.
I, too, remember when "Pulpit Hill" was just a sleepy little university
town, when there was always a free parking space and traffic jams were
things cities had--the pre-Ben Folds Five days when the Pressure Boys
and Snatches of Pink ruled weekend nights at Cat's Cradle …
But I digress. THE TOY BUDDHA is honestly quite beyond any other novel I've ever read, though it has
certain affinities to the sustained high-wire performances of novels
like Tom Robbins' ANOTHER ROADSIDE ATTRACTION and Robert Coovers' THE PUBLIC BURNING.
Luke and Billy's hallucinatory and madcap pursuit of the peripatetic
Buddha, who suddenly and briefly reappears in 1987 in Pulpit Hill, as
central as it is as a plot device, becomes virtually a sideshow
compared to Luke's by turns hilarious and merciless introspection in
this imaginary novel-memoir that at times reads like a crazed voyeur's
wet dream.
Not
that Luke is going crazy, though he could, and perhaps should, be--with
a faux friend like Billy inviting a crackup to make F. Scott Fitzgerald
weep in the wake of one betrayal after another. Admittedly, the jury
remains out as to what Billy, a.k.a. William Morocco, ultimately
represents. Is he a friend or a fiend? a visionary or a lunatic?
Perhaps the most we can say is that he seems meant to mirror an older
and more jaded version of Luke back to himself as a “cautionary tale”
of the imagination gone sour.
In a word, THE TOY BUDDHA serves up a trenchant critique of the alarming tendency most people
have to look outside themselves for meaning, be it spiritual or
political--whether they're giving away their power to a religion, a
guru, an elected official, a savior, or the Buddha himself now back on the loose
in these unprecedented pages.
"The
Road of Experience leads to the Palace of Wisdom," wrote Blake. Luke
certainly finds himself disabused through his "experience" with Billy
and the Buddha. The question is will this ultimately produce "wisdom"?
I'm willing to bet it will, eventually, at least a little, and I can
hardly wait to sink my teeth into Book III, PORTRAITS OF AN IMAGINARY YOUNG MAN.
Request your FREE copy of THE TOY BUDDHA today!
THE TOY BUDDHA: Life Itself Is the Proper Binge
Roseann Gabrys, Wyandotte, Michigan
You'll
want to read this book because of the possibly guilty pleasures it will
provide. Things you've done, things you've never done, things you wish
you had done and, of course, all those things you wish you’d never
done. You can't read about Luke Soloman's brush with life's landscape
without examining some of your own experiences and therein lies the
beauty. After all, the unexamined life is hardly worth living …
Julia
Child said, "Life itself is the proper binge." In THE TOY BUDDHA Luke
definitely explores the basis and bases (not to mention the baseness)
of bingeing. As the BEGINNER'S LUKE Series continues in Book II, we find
our hero searching for freedom, fun and females--not necessarily in
that order and ordering up a plentiful portion of each. The first
chapter sets the stage with a Bacchanalian Halloween celebration that
gives Luke the opportunity to expand his mind with hallucinogenic
drugs. If, as the plot proposes, we really are imagining it all, LSD is
bound to put one's imagination in overdrive and the irony is not lost
on Luke. His reason for being hinges on the idea of inventing his
identity.
The
mind is a deep subject and being allowed to probe its depths via
voyeurism is a rare privilege. That's the best part of the book:
getting a glimpse of the thoughts that make up the interior of
another's mind and then realizing how familiar some of them are. We can
relate. Early in the narrative Luke's heart is split in two. Who hasn't
had to deal with that (a time or two)? Heartache is one of those
lessons that if we don't learn we just keep repeating. At least
suffering can make you very aware of being alive and it's the awareness
we're chasing.
Luke
is looking for a teacher and just like the axiom, when the student is
ready, the teacher appears. This particular teacher doesn't appear in
your ordinary places either. When he turns up, everything else turns up
a notch. All the novel's settings are recalibrated and whatever is on
the dial above "high" takes over as the story becomes a matter of life
and death. The ride crests and then the downhill speed increases until
Luke is going so fast he catches up with himself. It’s almost a
detective thriller as Luke and his bud Billy lead us along looking for
something we sense we're seeking even if we're not sure what it is or
where to look. I won't spoil the Adventure for you; suffice to say Luke
survives.
When
the road rounds the final curve, we find ourselves like a rabbit
running in a circle, right back where we started in Luke's little
hometown. Rabbits remind me of ALICE IN WONDERLAND: "Begin at the
beginning," the King said gravely, "and go on till you come to the end:
then stop." That's what happens with this marvelous mystery.
As
the sun sets in the west, and the dark night of the soul descends, the
answers seem more elusive than ever. We can only take heart in the
knowledge that the Adventure hasn't ended, this cliffhanging segment
leaves us hopeful that the next installment, PORTRAITS OF AN IMAGINARY
YOUNG MAN, will offer more clues and bring us closer to truth--the holy
grail, the prize in the Cracker Jack box. Come on, man, don't abandon
us now! It's just getting good …
Request your FREE copy of THE TOY BUDDHA today!
[Sol Luckman is author of the internationally acclaimed nonfiction CONSCIOUS HEALING: BOOK ONE
ON THE REGENETICS METHOD and the BEGINNER'S LUKE Series of novels.
Luke's signature obsessions with self, sex, satire and slapdash highlight a
serious, and life-changing, point: consciousness creates. The point is there is a point to
living in the imagination–for only through it can we reinvent our
ourselves and our world. Currently, the author is giving away FREE copies of BEGINNER'S LUKE and THE TOY BUDDHA. To take advantage of this
FREE offer, click here.]