Fool
Written by Frederick Dillen and Nancy Pearl
Narrated by David Colacci
4/5
()
About this audiobook
“For Christ sake don’t become a fluffmeister” are the last words Barnaby Griswold’s father utters to him. But despite trying to turn out otherwise, Barnaby is indisputably a fool. A well-educated, well-connected investments player on the one hand, but an entitled money-driven fool on the other.
Barnaby Griswold’s life changes almost overnight when he’s found to have acted perhaps slimily (but not illegally) by selling short a stock. His wife deserts him, his daughters disown him, and he loses his final and favorite home. All he has left is a similarly deserted mother-in-law, in Oklahoma of all places, and of course the enemies who went belly up on his final deal.
At forty-six, disgraced and broke and lonely, Barnaby must repair his life and maybe, just maybe, he’ll learn that doing the foolish thing may lead to his redemption.
Out of print for more than a decade, Frederick G. Dillen’s comic and now timely novel about an unlikely hero is being reissued as part of librarian and NPR commentator Nancy Pearl’s Book Lust Rediscoveries series.
Frederick Dillen
Frederick G. Dillen was born in Greenwich Village to a family on fire, raised in a New Hampshire boarding school, and graduated from Stanford. To pay for his writing, he worked odd jobs from Lahaina to Taos and New York to L.A., managing a hotel and running a fake ranch, carrying plates and shilling for business. His short fiction has appeared in literary quarterlies and Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards. His Hero was named Best First Novel of 1994 by the Dictionary of Literary Biography. Dillen and his wife Leslie are parents of two grown daughters and three dogs and have settled, for good they hope, in New Mexico.
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Reviews for Fool
13 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I got this back when I still sometimes read paperbacks, which was about a year ago. I finally got around to reading it and it was good. Barnaby Griswold is the eponymous fool, a "fluffmeister" according to his father who uses other people in order to make money for himself. But after a deal goes sour and Barnaby is banned from finance for four years, he ends up hitting rock bottom in Oklahoma City, where he maybe starts to turn things around.
The book starts slow but eventually starts to take shape. While I enjoyed Barnaby as a character, some of the situations seemed almost surreal and the dialogue was not very sharp. Still it was an enjoyable read.
That is all. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Barnaby Griswold, whether he admits it to himself or not, is largely perceived by the rest of the world to be a fool. Those closest to him, his father and ex-mother-in-law, among them, have even told him so to his face. Barnaby, however, is a hustler, a man very good at putting together business deals and investments from which he generally walks away with more cash than those who put their own money at risk. So, pardon Barnaby if he believes there are bigger fools in the world than him.But as Fool opens, it has all, inevitably, gone horribly wrong for Barnaby Griswold. The get-rich-quick swindle he pulled off in Oklahoma City has blown up in his face and Barnaby is penniless – and soon to be even homeless. Resigned to vacating what used to be his family’s summer home by Labor Day, he finally starts to pack his few things on the afternoon of that very day. But where to go?It is when, by chance, Barnaby hears of his ex-mother-in-law’s stroke that a plan begins to come together for him. Returning to the scene of the crime, Oklahoma City, he will volunteer to help care for her as she recovers. Unfortunately for our fool, Oklahoma City is also home to most of his recent victims, and one of them is out for revenge – any way that he can get it.Fool, the second of Frederick G. Dillen’s two novels – first published in 1999 – is part of the new Amazon Encore / Book Lust Rediscoveries series for which Nancy Pearl selects her favorite out-of-print books for publication by Amazon. The books selected must have been originally published between 1960 and 2000.As Pearl says in her introduction to Fool, “It’s the feelings or emotions that you experience while you’re reading a book that you remember, not the details that make up the plot.” That is certainly the case with Fool. Barnaby Griswold is far from being the most likable guy in the world, but he surprises everyone, himself as much as anyone, with his capacity to grow and change. His evolving relationship with his ex-mother-in-law begins as a selfish act of Barnaby’s – he desperately needs a home, after all – but morphs into a relationship of genuine fondness and respect on both their parts. In a style combining multiple flashbacks, a tennis game that takes half the book to complete, and sections of stream-of-consciousness prose, Dillen creates a rather inspirational character in Barnaby Griswold. He might start out as an obnoxious and annoying boor, but Barnaby finally figures it all out, falls in love again, and just might live the second half of his life a whole lot differently than he lived the first half. Or he might not.Nancy Pearl made a good choice with this one. Fool, like its main character, deserves a second chance.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Fool is the kind of book that initially makes you squirm. Its main character, Barnaby Griswold is such the train wreck that you cannot help but be embarrassed by him, and worse, for him. You pity him because he is the epitomy of loser in addition to fool. He cheats. He steals. What he does not have in morality he makes up in enormous ego. Middle aged and homeless. Paunchy and divorced, Barnaby seems like the ultimate lost cause. While the book has a predictable ending and there are no stun-the-reader moments you cannot help but fall in love with Barnaby and root for him as the underdog, even in his worst moments.