And I remain a big fan of Semi-Tough, but there's no way it's published today by a major house -- and not because it wasn't well-written, but because if frequently lapsed into political incorrectness in some of the nastiest ways imaginable.
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Ben_Hecht said:And I remain a big fan of Semi-Tough, but there's no way it's published today by a major house -- and not because it wasn't well-written, but because if frequently lapsed into political incorrectness in some of the nastiest ways imaginable.
Don Perryman said:Then there were the twins in Sometimes You Gotta Play Hurt - Lemonjello and Limejello
Lemonjello was the half-brother.Birdscribe said:Don Perryman said:Then there were the twins in Sometimes You Gotta Play Hurt - Lemonjello and Limejello
It was Orangejello and Limejello, Don. But point taken.
Ben_Hecht said:And I remain a big fan of Semi-Tough, but there's no way it's published today by a major house -- and not because it wasn't well-written, but because if frequently lapsed into political incorrectness in some of the nastiest ways imaginable.
I hear that. The book remains sui generis, and most of the humor remains hilarious. It's the offhand racism that's offputting, and S-T is by no means unique among DJ's novels, for that.Moderator1 said:Ben_Hecht said:And I remain a big fan of Semi-Tough, but there's no way it's published today by a major house -- and not because it wasn't well-written, but because if frequently lapsed into political incorrectness in some of the nastiest ways imaginable.
Which is what made it great.
I don't think PC has ever been Dan's thing. His tweet a couple of years back is proof of that.
Double Down said:This is one of my favorite opening sentences ever, from a feature he wrote for SI on Joe Namath in 1966.
Stoop-Shouldered and sinisterly handsome, he slouches against the wall of the saloon, a filter cigarette in his teeth, collar open, perfectly happy and self-assured, gazing through the uneven darkness to sort out the winners from the losers.
UNCGrad said:Im re-reading "Dead Solid Perfect" once again (hopeful that Kenny Lee Puckett can hold off Donny Smithern again), just because it's a quick-as-heck read and I was inspired upon hearing of DJ and the Hall. The racism is rampant, but I'd say all of it is spoken from the voice of the most ignorant and least educated characters in the book. I think that's the point, and the device that's being used.