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Top Mark (2012)

by Graeme Aitken(Favorite Author)
3 of 5 Votes: 3
languge
English
genre
publisher
20Ten Books
review 1: Mark and Mark are an established couple with habits, quirks, and ways well known to each other, and that may be half the problem. They’ve been together seven years, and in spite of being able to give each other some space they may still have more togetherness than one of them wants.Top Mark, our narrator, calls his lover Marx, partly as a joke, partly to differentiate them, something that doesn’t always work. The name conjured up a quote, which grew more and more ironic as the story progressed. “From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.”Unfortunately, Marx has little ability and great need—the depth of his reliance on others is crystal clear to everyone, including his lover, though everyone seems to accommodate him. Marx has no trouble ra... moreiding his lover’s wardrobe permanently and accepting lavish gifts from mommy, no trouble at all prolonging his college experience far beyond the bounds of reason, no trouble taking without giving.The more our narrator tells us of the evolution of their relationship, from the days of their starting out to the more recent events of the last six months, the more the two men diverge. The more Marx clings to the perks of adolescence the older Mark seems by comparison, until the six-year gap looks like a chasm, but it’s one of responsibility more than age. And yet the tighter Mark clings.The troubles between them unfold in small steps, each little detail piling on as Mark describes, with a certain naiveté, the recent goings on. Unsettling phone calls are almost the least of it, though providing a certain note of both humor and WTF.Both Mark and Marx will provoke a lot of strong feelings, though Aww! won’t be among them. The ending will make you think and ache; there is no happily ever anything here, but it’s beautifully drawn misery.
review 2: I can't say why I like this. It really isn't a story. More of a running monologue inside this guy's head. But, something about his journey spoke to me. If our country ever progresses to the place where GLBT lit is included in Freshman Comp...I expect to see Top Mark included. It has a lot of layers and if I were so inclined, I could probably write an essay about it, with a longer word count. For me it was a brilliant piece of writing that made me feel. less
Reviews (see all)
Grace
Well written and engaging, but lacked resolution.
Max
SERIOUSLY!
nao
2.5
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