| A Review of: The Dreamlife of Bridges by W.P. KinsellaDisjointed' would be a one-word summary of this novel that introduces
a number of quirky, interesting characters, but never seems to know
what to do with them once they've been created. Set in Vancouver,
Leo and June are the main characters running on a primarily parallel
course that we expect to eventually intersect permanently, but that
expectation is never met. Leo is fortyish. The main burden he carries
is that his son died at 20. He creates his own misery. He is fired
from one job for general incompetence, loses another because he
refuses to take a turn working night shift like everyone else. He
ends up homeless. June is an unstable single mother. Violent, a
drinker, a druggie, she loses custody of her son after assaulting
a social worker, though there were extenuating circumstances. There
are a number of eccentric denizens of a rooming house where Leo
sometimes stays, including a woman in hoop skirts who keeps geese
in her room. June occasionally promotes and invests in penny stocks
working for a truly smarmy stock promoter, a professional loser
named Kaslikoff. She doesn't appear intelligent enough for this
sort of work. There is an enlightening chapter where June's horrific
mother visits from England and we see why June is such an emotional
wreck. The characters, although sometimes fascinating, just don't
come together in any meaningful way. One reason is that no one is
likable, not even June's child, who has the terrifying name of
Gunther. These are not lovable losers. I wanted to say to each of
them Stop feeling sorry for yourself, grow a backbone, and get a
life.'
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