shipperx: (Spike- When do we destroy the world)
[personal profile] shipperx

I saw this thing mentioned on EW.com the other day and o.0?! 

Today,  I ran across a review of his novel.  I cannot say that I'm surprised.

review by Simon Maloy:
 ...

More than anything else, The Overton Window is Glenn Beck's very own fantasy land. He's dreamed up a world in which all the conspiracies and apocalyptic rhetoric that clutter his chalkboards every night are proven to be entirely true. The constant refrain of victimization coming from the Tea Partiers is also revealed to be justified, as Beck constructs an elaborate network of government agencies, saboteurs, and agents provocateurs who exist solely to demonize the fictionalized versions of these unflinchingly patriotic Americans.

The Overton Window is also very creepy. The characters speak in stilted monologues that are stuffed with anti-progressive, limited-government talking points. They quote the Founding Fathers at length and from memory and breezily name-drop obscure political theorists as if they were talking about star athletes. The protagonist, Noah Gardner, and the love interest, Molly Ross, cap off their first kiss with a discussion of the flat tax.

What The Overton Window is not, despite the jacket's boasting, is "a thriller." The action is infrequent and confusing. Early on there's a police raid on a Tea Party-like gathering that involves a gun shot (that hits no one) and a beating. After that, the book goes 170 pages without any action at all. Instead we're treated to a break-in in which no one is in danger of being caught, a high-speed chase that almost happens, and a plot to use Star Wars quotes to bypass airport security. The action finally resumes with a gun fight in which a YouTube star-turned-FBI agent is revealed as a quick-draw specialist. A nuke goes off (killing three people), and the novel ends -- not with a tense denouement, but with a bewildering torture scene presided over by the ostensible villain, Noah's father, who recites the last of his many awkwardly ideological diatribes: "Saul Alinsky was right, Noah -- the ends do justify the means."

This lack of any appreciable action makes the book's many flaws, plot holes, and loose ends all the more glaring. An informant assassinated in the prologue is never mentioned again and the identity of his killer is never revealed. Beck introduces a doctor character in a mid-book chapter who performs no key role and is not heard from again. The characters who do stick around act in an incomprehensible fashion. At the beginning of the book, Noah's father insists that the time to launch the evil plot is nigh: "I told them that now is the time, and ultimately they concurred." At the end of the book, he says the exact opposite: "After all the years of preparation it was rushed forward, against my advice." Noah attends a political rally and constantly reminds the reader that the only reason he's there is to ingratiate himself to Molly, who quickly and harshly rebuffs him. So what does he do? He remains there, alone, for hours. Why? Simply because it's necessary to the plot.

As for the plot itself, it's reliance on multiple conspiracies (and stubborn refusal to explain most of them) makes it disjointed and confusing. In addition to the main conspiracy that drives the story, there's a conspiracy to discredit Molly's group of freedom fighters, a conspiracy to frame an FBI agent for selling nukes to terrorists, and an ill-defined scheme by the freedom fighters to infiltrate the main organs of the evildoers' infrastructure. The plot also suffers critically from the lack of an actual villain. Noah's father is the representative of the villains, but he spends most of his time telling us how stupid Americans are. Characters are killed, but we never know by whom - it's always "they." We're told that a domestic terrorist cell is led by a (possibly Muslim) man named Elmer, but do we ever meet Elmer? Nope.

There is one thing The Overton Window does not lack -- irony, albeit of the unintentional variety. This novel represents Glenn Beck's vision of the world as it would be if it operated according to his rules, and he lays out the scenario by which he believes the "progressive" movement can undermine the country. Given that the result is nonsensical, poorly envisioned, and even more poorly executed, one has to think that the only way Beck's worldview could be considered plausible is if the world itself were no longer beholden to sense or reason.    


Date: 2010-06-15 03:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] petzipellepingo.livejournal.com
Yeah, USA Today wrote about it as well.

Date: 2010-06-15 03:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shipperx.livejournal.com
So the book is ghost written and/or written by committee. With footnotes! (It's amazing how people are convinced by footnotes. It's as if having radom things taken out of context and drawing a line between them actually constitutes logic. When... no.)

Date: 2010-06-15 04:32 pm (UTC)
elsaf: (Default)
From: [personal profile] elsaf
Beck didn't write it himself? How Shatner-esque of him.

Frankly, I would know for sure he didn't write it if it had been coherent.

Date: 2010-06-15 05:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shipperx.livejournal.com
Frankly, I would know for sure he didn't write it if it had been coherent

But, apparently, he didn't write it and it's incoherent!

Date: 2010-06-15 08:09 pm (UTC)
spikewriter: (Default)
From: [personal profile] spikewriter
There's footnotes? In a novel? o_0

Date: 2010-06-15 10:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shipperx.livejournal.com
And I bet they aren't nearly as amusing as the ones found in Gaiman and Pratchett's Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter

Date: 2010-06-15 04:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beer-good-foamy.livejournal.com
Sounds more than a little like Left Behind without the religious stuff. Though I doubt it's as hilarious as Left Behind.

Date: 2010-06-15 05:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shipperx.livejournal.com
I've never had the nerve to read Left Behind because my brain goes into physics meltdown ranty-rants about the fact that if one were to "stop time" then space, physical matter, and atoms would cease to exist as well. There wouldn't be anything 'left behind.'

Space-time continuum is hyphenated (or simply a single word) for a reason.

I know, I know. These folks don't want science being all mixy with their religion.

Omnipotence, ya'll.

Date: 2010-06-15 05:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beer-good-foamy.livejournal.com
Hmmm, I'm not sure they actually claim that God stopped time in that book. Then again, even if they did, it wouldn't be the biggest problem the book has...

Date: 2010-06-15 06:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shipperx.livejournal.com
But isn't that the premise of everyone disappearing in the "Rapture"? That God stops time, steals all the good bonafide Christians, then starts things back up again having left only the non-bonafides to face the coming trials and tribulations? I thought that was what the whole Rapture myth was about.

Date: 2010-06-15 07:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beer-good-foamy.livejournal.com
That's what happens, yeah, but it's not how it happens. IIRC, Proper Christians (and fetuses, and children, and corpses) just blink out of existence from one second to the next. There's no mention of time being stopped.

God does personally wipe out the entire Russian air force when they attack Israel to steal the secret of how to grow salad in the desert, though. (Well, the Russians and the "middle Eastern" countries of Lybia and Ethiopia.) That's in the first 10 pages.

Date: 2010-06-15 08:11 pm (UTC)
spikewriter: (Bookworm by eyesthatslay - P&P)
From: [personal profile] spikewriter
Y'know, if it wasn't for the fact I'd cut off my left arm rather than give Beck money, this sounds like the perfect birthday gift for my uncle-in-law.

Of course, the husband would be horrified by the comment believing such a gift as perfect made on my opinion of said uncle...

Date: 2010-06-16 12:04 am (UTC)
next_to_normal: (whatting a what)
From: [personal profile] next_to_normal
Wow. That's just... wow. It's so bad it's almost fascinating, in a "rubbernecking a car wreck" kind of way.

Date: 2010-06-16 01:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wildrider.livejournal.com
Am... speechless.

Date: 2010-06-16 03:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nutmeg3.livejournal.com
Color me unsurprised.

April 2022

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24 252627282930

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 24th, 2026 03:53 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios