Showing posts with label Nobody's Fool by Richard Russo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nobody's Fool by Richard Russo. Show all posts

Saturday, March 13, 2021

March 13, 2021 DON'T YOU FORGET ABOUT ME

YOU KNOW YOU'RE GETTING OLDER WHEN:        


  •   You read People magazine AND DON'T RECOGNIZE THE CELEBRITIES. 
  •   You say something to your kids that YOUR MOTHER USED TO SAY TO YOU.
  •  It takes you TWICE as long to look HALF as good.
  • You think you have more patience--but you really--JUST DON'T CARE ANYMORE.
  • You look for your phone for an hour and it's in your pocket.
  •  Your address book contains mostly DEAD people. Maybe just having an address book makes YOU old??
  • You hear SNAP, CRACKLE, POP when you walk down the stairs. 
  •  The "Oldies Station" is NOW playing the music you grew up with.

Yup--That about sums up my week.  Now on to bigger and better things. I'm a huge fan of Richard Russo, so I'm trying to read all of his books. I recently finished Nobody's Fool which was written in 1993 and made into a film staring Paul Newman in 1994. The novel is set in upstate New York in a tiny blue collar town called Bath and centers on the main character Donald "Sully" Sullivan. Sully is a 60 year old divorced  man with a bad knee who lives in a rented room above his landlady, Beryle Peoples. Because of his ailing health, Sully has difficulty working, but he is generally a construction worker when he can find the work and enough pain pills to make working bearable. Sully also seems to have commitment issues--an on again off again affair with a married woman and a son he could never commit to being a father to--because he's haunted. Haunted by his dead father, a mean drunk who abused him when he was a kid. Sully has never forgiven his father so in a sense--he's stuck. After his estranged son, Peter, returns to Bath, Sully is forced to face the choices he's made. This is a novel really about a small town, with a bunch of eccentric wonderful characters just trying to figure out life--which at times can be very complicated. It's about 560 pages or a 7 mile run that is well worth your time.