G Younger I am reading the Stupid Boy series now for the second time. I honestly think my favorite character is Precious. That cat is freaking hilarious. keep up the great work
G Younger I am reading the Stupid Boy series now for the second time. I honestly think my favorite character is Precious. That cat is freaking hilarious. keep up the great work
Second time? You're a newbie. I think I'm on my fourth or fifth time, and I still go back and read just sections I feel like once and a while. Like right now I just got the urge to go back and reread the Star Wars meeting.
What do you think of 'A Better Man' so far?
I feel the POV change is somewhat disengaging, but the protagonist is living up to the title and being less of a douchebag.
AJ
rambling about finding pussy
I haven't seen any story about finding "Precious".
"I honestly think my favorite character is Precious. That cat is freaking hilarious. keep up the great work."
I haven't seen any story about finding "Precious".
There is a very famous story where a character named Gollum wants to find his "Precious". Not on SOL though :D
Initially I wasn't thrilled with the new format. I was also put off by the price for the complete book on Bookapy. I learned it was available on his, GYounger.com, website at a different price. I bought it and after listening to it the approach made sense.
I am able to listen to an epub using Moon+ Reader on an Android device.
It is interesting to see David grow up. Sure wish I had been as lucky having his group of mentors.
I keep waiting for the better man to bet. Without betting he isn't a better.
That prompted me to Google 'bettor vs better'. I've been using 'bettor' for several years now because that seems to be the norm amongst gamblers with a mathematical bent. But apparently it started as Ye Olde Englishe, went out of use, was reincarnated by Americans and is now gaining ground internationally.
AJ
I confess, I still haven't finished the last volume of Stupid Boy. It's a fun ride on a ridiculous plot train, but for whatever reason, I stalled out a few chapters after one of the best single chapter of the whole series, the Valentine's Day Massacre. Reading it just started feeling like slogging. I keep thinking that, as a writer, I should try to figure out how and why that is, but every time I return to it, there's no joy in it for me.
Are there any startling twists or especially fun moments in the rest of the volume to lure me on?
No not really just the same thing over and over. That is why I liked the cat from hell parts of the books. One was the Thunder Dome description "2 cats enter only one leaves"
I generally find that type of story impossible to read after a few chapters. This one I made it through the first year but regretted spending the time doing it.
Would you rather get 3 short chapters a week or one long chapter a week?
3 short chapters.
They're more convenient to read and they keep the story fresh in the mind.
AJ
Like I said this is my second time reading the series. I realized as I got to Senior Year 3 David's family are a complete bunch of mooches. He has to put money on debit cards for them now they want to take over his house in LA. And to top it off they have his finance people put him on an allowance telling him he is spending to much money. Man for an Alpha Male he is a complete pussy....still enjoy reading though
He offered them his house in LA because they took over the care of HIS 5 kids. And he was spending way to much money for a minor.
but now he is 18 they are still doing it. OK I can understand the house but his parents have jobs and make decent money yet they still sponge off him
How are they sponging off of him? Have you thought he is making sure they have money to take care of his 5 kids?
Remember this all started by him becoming a model to save the family from ruin when his mom got cancer.
If I was rich I would make damn sure those who raised me would want for nothing.
If I was rich I would make damn sure those who raised me would want for nothing.
Agreed.
Taking care of his children is not being a mooch. Paying for that is just being responsible.
ETA: As for paying for his mom's cancer treatment, what kind of person would leave their mom to die just to save money?
Taking care of his children is not being a mooch.
If you've got a 30 year old child still living at home with no job, living off their parent's money, yes, that's being a mooch.
Barring certain conditions, at some point, the children have to learn to be responsible adults and take care of themselves.
Not teaching this to your children and continuing to support them well into adulthood is co-dependency, not "taking care of them."
As for paying for his mom's cancer treatment, what kind of person would leave their mom to die just to save money?
They're out there. My wife is Director of Nursing at an Assisted Living facility. She's had people drop their parents off, pay the base minimum to keep them there, never visit, never call, and not give Mom extra money even to get something from a fast food place when they take them out on trips.
never visit, never call, and not give Mom extra money even to get something from a fast food place when they take them out on trips.
Worthless waste of air in other words. There should be a special place in hell for people like that.
never visit, never call, and not give Mom extra money even to get something from a fast food place when they take them out on trips.
Worthless waste of air in other words. There should be a special place in hell for people like that.
Those people will get theirs. What do you think will happen when their kids have to put them in a nursing home? Karma is a bitch.
Worthless waste of air in other words. There should be a special place in hell for people like that.
I totally agree. I'm very glad I and my two brothers visit our mother in her Alzheimer care facility every single weekend and sometimes during the week too. We provide her with literally everything she needs, and more. We even make sure to have something extra for the caretakers every now and then because they do a tremendous job I couldn't do if wanted too.
While the observed behaviuor appears to be heartless, it will never be clear to an neutral observer what precipitated the lack of caring. Parents can be just as much at fault as the children.
If I was rich I would make damn sure those who raised me would want for nothing.
That made me think of the opposite extreme, although the father was absolutely not father-of-the-year material.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-21017058 and the Wikipedia entry.
Man for an Alpha Male he is a complete pussy....still enjoy reading though
This may sound strange, but I'm actually reading 'Stupid Boy' for the first time. In the Senior Year now.
What I have found, since the main character in the story I've written is effectively the ultimate Alpha Male, is that there is a difference between being a pussy and being a dick. Notice I said being, not having. You can be a caring person while still being the HMFIC.
While David's circumstances in Illinois are uncommon, he has the most important thing needed for success, and that's a support network.
I don't see his family as being "mooches" (other than his Sister-in-law). His father went from being an unpaid adviser (while still working his full time job) to being the CEO/proxy for his son who wanted to focus on school/sports/acting. Not to mention helping care for his son's children.
His mother runs a Realtor business that her son invested in and makes a profit off of.
The MC and his mother both ran the financials through separate outside analysis before conducting a business transaction.
The MC decided to buy the building primarily to establish a restaurant/nightclub. He was able to get reliable tenants in previously Unoccupied spaces by putting his own management company, his mom's Realtor business, and encouraged his older brother to open his massage business, rather than using a spare bedroom. In the bargain he gets his mother to keep an eye on the other tenants.
Yes he invested in his family members businesses, but they have Contracts, and he is a part owner in each and is profiting and gaining Tax Benefits.
He has also hired friends to research properties, purchase them, and remodeling them as "college projects" for far less money than hiring professionals. Yet he is more satisfied than he likely would have been if he had outsourced.
The "Stupid Boy" is creating "Win - Win" situations, where he gets what he wants at a discount cost, while benefitting family and friends.
The "Stupid Boy" is creating "Win - Win" situations, where he gets what he wants at a discount cost, while benefitting family and friends.
That's probably Donald Trump's rationale for giving top government posts to friends and family.
I'm not sure it equates with America's self-image of being a meritocracy.
Damn, that's skirting perilously close to the verboten topic of politics - I'd better zip my lip ;-)
AJ
That's probably Donald Trump's rationale for giving top government posts to friends and family.
That's the rationale for probably every elected politician in the USA for giving top government posts to friends and family.
comment amended for better accuracy.
comment amended for better accuracy.
Still not accurate.
That's the rationale for probably every elected politician in every democratic country for giving top government posts to friends and family.
Better, but I'm not sure it's accurate to exclude un-elected leaders in non-democratic countries.
Ok, I'm going to be different and say I liked the Stupid Boy saga. It was an enjoyable read. Yes, David's life comes across as one improbable thing after another, yet if you start with the premise that he had just a little bit more of whatever than the rest of us mortals, it all kinda falls together. The challenge is going to be to get him through his college years without going overboard. My only complaint so far is that the chapters are a little short so it is kinda hard to keep the story momentum going. One thing is for certain - Stewart is going down, and it will be interesting how David accomplishes that.
Yes, David's life comes across as one improbable thing after another, yet if you start with the premise that he had just a little bit more of whatever than the rest of us mortals, it all kinda falls together.
Reminds me of the Richard Jackson saga by "Banadin" (Ed Nelson and sometimes spouse.) Actually "Ed" is an Earl. Stories by nobles are often better. Argon is a noble gas. If you disagree, put up your Dukes.
Stewart Chadwick was fired as one of the first official duties of the newly appointed Athletic Director. He's history. You apparently haven't gotten to that point in the book, so I'll say no more....don't wish to be the 'spoiler'
FYI I read each chapter the day it posts. If you will check the date of my post mentioning Stewart you will see that it is dated 10/8/21.
This is very well written and has a good story line but there's something that has bothered me and it took a while for me to put my finger on it. Up through 8th grade the main character was apparently a decent student and played some baseball, but by his junior year he is the #1 recruit in the country in football (a sport played by millions of kids, many of whom have been playing since they were very young), is one of the top baseball players in the country, and then also becomes a successful model, wins an Oscar, is a martial arts expert, is a trained pilot, and ends up as school valedictorian. And we're also meant to believe that he's a good dad to five (!!!) kids. I get that it's fiction, but constantly being the best at everything despite minimal time and background in those things is just completely implausible.
I am by the end of college he will have won multiple Heisman Trophies and Golden Spikes awards, will be the valedictorian at USC with a triple major in organic chemistry, molecular biology and chemical engineering, have won multiple Olympic gold medals in swimming, athletics and speed skating, have invented cures for AIDS and cancer, directed multiple Academy Award winning blockbusters, and have banged his way through each of the Maxim hottest 100 women (with each of them declaring that he's the best they've ever been with).
by the end of college he will have won multiple Heisman Trophies [...]
And thus we have a golden opportunity for authorial restraint. If he merely wins one Heisman and one Golden Spikes award, is the salutatorian, merely managed a double major (and gotten a B or two - maybe even a C!), only picked up one Olympic gold, only cured a few forms of cancer, hasn't even directed an Academy Award-winning film, and has only visited 1/4 of the hottest 100 women, one can read it and see "see, he's human after all".
:)
Up through 8th grade the main character was apparently a decent student and played some baseball, but by his junior year he is the #1 recruit in the country in football (a sport played by millions of kids, many of whom have been playing since they were very young), is one of the top baseball players in the country, and then also becomes a successful model, wins an Oscar, is a martial arts expert, is a trained pilot, and ends up as school valedictorian.
From what's said in the story we're made aware he's a nerd and not that physically developed and a bit tubby but still very good for his age and size in playing baseball. He's coming up to a significant time in his physical development when he's shipped out to his uncle's farm. At the farm he undergoes a major growth spurt while doing a lot of physical labor, thus he turns the fat into muscle with the hard work while also going through a major change in his approach to life. He returns home taller, physically well developed, while also a lot more into planning and thinking ahead.
When he first starts playing American Football he's not that great, but he does the usual nerd thing and studies it while also getting more physically fit. The result is he becomes a better football player. Now I'm not that familiar with playing American Football, but from what I've learned by watching it being played, reading about it, and conversing with people who have played it, I understand that an important part of being able to play American Football well is being physically fit for the position they play, another important part is understanding what they have to do in particular plays the team uses and in reacting to the opposition plays. This is true for all of the position, however, what differentiates the good quarterbacks from the great quarterbacks is what they call 'Football Smarts' which I take as the ability to read what happening on the field and to instantly react to it. This is because the quarterback is their team's on field tactical leader. A big aspect of being a great quarterback is researching and learning plays etc. - - Well, research and learning is what nerds excel at, and all the way through the books we're told about how much effort David puts into researching and learning and practicing. Thus it makes sense he starts to excel at playing the game. Playing the game at a younger age isn't that relevant to be a good player if you really study it when you do start to play.
As to being a model, the majority of that is due to his new physical appearance being what they want, and him doing as told. Then his nerd study habits kick in again and he learns how to do the job well.
The above is true for the acting. Mind you, winning an Academy Award is more about the politics within the US film industry and the publicity around the film made than it is about the skills of the award winners.
Martial arts is mostly practice and physical ability, again things that fit in well with the new David.
Once the new look David appears the rest is an acceptable progression of events as something grabs his interest. The only thing that may or may not be acceptable is the level of physical change during the time he's at the farm. I never did sort out if he was at the farm for three or four months, but that's plenty of time to make those sort of physical changes to someone. While military basic training can take from 3 months to seven months, depending on the nation and service involved, it does also include a hell of a lot more training material than just getting physically fit. So three of four months of hard work will make a difference to physical fitness in anyone, especially someone at that age entering a growth period. I know this can happen as I've seen it happen to cousins who spent the two months of summer holidays in hard work situations, but how much effect is had varied a great deal with the ones I know of.
So yes, I think there is a little bit of stretching going on in the story, but not as much as you state, and not enough to be totally unacceptable. However, it is escapist literature so don't look for life perfect, either.
As to being a great Dad, that's mostly due to his parents and the mothers doing the bulk of the work in looking after the kids.
While military basic training can take from 3 months to seven months, depending on the nation and service involved, it does also include a hell of a lot more training material than just getting physically fit.
I can testify it can not only make you physically fit, it can REALLY change you. I didn't go to BCT until I was 19, which is normally after I should have had my last growth spurt. I grew two inches, from 6' to 6'2", my chest went from 38 to 44, and my waist went from 40 to 34.
My old man was 82nd airborne in WW2. After the war, he carried forward into Korea. When he finally got the approval to bring my mother back, he didn't take the re-enlistment.
Once set in, the folks like him found it hard to set aside habits developed during their service. From the time I was five forward, I was up early dawn running with him. It didn't stop until I was run over at 14yo. The fitness level I was at probably saved my life. So yes, it definitely can change you. I'd be nothing but a memory of a chalk line without his training, of that I am sure.
I was 19, which is normally after I should have had my last growth spurt. I grew two inches, from 6' to 6'2", my chest went from 38 to 44, and my waist went from 40 to 34.
Oh please, don't tease us. When quoting body stats like that it is custom to include cup sizeβ¦
:)
When quoting body stats like that it is custom to include cup size
Men's cup sizes are a completely different measurement to women's cup sizes ;-)
AJ
Men's cup sizes are a completely different measurement to women's cup sizes ;-)
So says the man whose cup runneth overβ¦
:)
it is custom to include cup size
Unlike the guy who actually DOES need a 13 1/2" cup ... and even better, he's white ... I'll just say what my ex-wife told me. She said that the first time we were together, she really liked me, thought I was a great guy, and thought it'd be okay even if I was 'lacking' in that department. Then she found out I was NOT 'lacking' downstairs, and was VERY happy.
How'd you know what she said?
I really shouldn't explain this because it'll shatter some readers lives, but here goes;
The truth is that it is all about context. Women need it, men don't really care.
A guy asks a question, another guy answers, both are happy.
A woman asks a question, another woman answers, then they discus the context, THEN both are happy.
BUT
When a guy asks a question and a woman answers, the guy never even hears the context.
Thus
Guy: "You are really getting off on this, aren't you?"
Woman: "Oh god yes! Your dick is so hard! (Compared to your best friend)"
I served in two branches: USAF and USA. Basic in USAF was an ordeal, an exercise in learning where to be at what time. Basic in the Army was fun, and I mean that in a Boy Scout Camp sort of way: I had a blast, and at age 27, the Drills would throw me the starship (platoon housing area) keys for the weekend.
I don't think either experience changed me, but I realize I am a somewhat unique case.
The MC is extraordinary.
Has extraordinary Luck.
His physical fitness is among the more believable aspects of the character. His uncle got him started with hard work, improved diet, and discipline. His uncle's close friend was the HS football coach who gave the MC a chance.
MC benefited from not having to Unlearn bad habits in football. He had the discipline to follow a good conditioning program. The MC witnessed others become injured due to lack of conditioning, or use steroids. Thus reinforced his conditioning regime.
He also benefited from other people paying for him to get Professional Coaching from 2 different QB Coaches. I have seen athletes who are privileged to attend these intense camps for top athletes. Two players from my HS made it to the NBA.
Dedication is one of his "super powers" that allows him to make the most of his opportunities.
His GF was a gifted politician who taught him how to "Work a Room" so he Creates Opportunities!
This really works! I am neither as talented nor as Lucky. However, I have testified about veterans issues in both Washington DC, and my state legislature. A couple of years later I was at a "welcome back ceremony" after a deployment, and my congressman came up, called me by name, and shook my hand.
I was just an Infantry NCO, when I was surprised that he knew me, the congressman said, "few people from my district meet me in my DC office. I remember those who do. Also, you have contacted me about other veterans, and then followed up."
I have been able to get assistance from people way above my pay grade, partially because I have approached them. Mostly because I do so for other veterans or respectable veterans charities. My CIB and some of my "fruit salad" don't hurt.
As for the pilot's license, I know dozens of kids who got one while in HS. One was a SP4 in a National Guard unit I served in. He would fly back from college each month to attend Drill Weekends! He was unique! His goal was to become a pilot in the Air Force, but was in the Infantry during college! He was amassing flight hours. (If he was in the Air National Guard as an Enlisted man he would have been a mechanic or something until he got his commission...)
His success as a model seems Mostly based upon his doing what he is told, being on time, and endurance. He treats it as a Job, and is willing to give a bit extra.
He reminds me of a combination of Tom Brady, who has demonstrated dedication to his craft, and savvy about making money.
Outlandish as the totality of the story is. The aspects of conditioning and preparation, that controlling your "brand" endorsements, the BS of College Sports, etc. is what I find interesting.
In re: his summer on his uncle's farm, I have run a manual post hole digger, that there is probably no better way to develop upper body strength. Arms, shoulders, back, stomach - all get a good workout And standing in one place for eight to ten hours a day do the legs good as well.
Also, some people are just able to integrate incoming information and reach a conclusion faster than others. Aid that with top-level training and stand back!
And, in the other direction (pull, not push), rowing machine or (a vertical rower) an ergometer.
I read the story, but I hated David almost from the start. He screwed up the lives of most of his girlfriends and his attitude made me want to shoot him. I quit reading when the kids started showing up.