Model Behavior FROM THE PUBLISHER
Connor McKnight - former acolyte of film, Zen and Japanese literature - is not unaware that these avocations are wildly remote from his present occupation (fledgling celebrity journalist). Moreover, his longtime girlfriend, the fashion model Philomena, suddenly seems curiously remote herself - and soon enough appears to have decamped, avec diaphragm, for the other coast. Then there's the sister with whom he shared a flamboyantly addled childhood, and who now matches her brilliance for theoretical abstraction with a compassion for world suffering so acute that her own well-being is imperiled. These and other anxieties, Connor finds, can scarcely be assuaged by his trio of flirting obsessions - a gorgeous stripper, a screenplay-in-progress in his drawer, the notion of a meaningful future - or by his principal ally and best friend, a monkishly neurotic, militantly vegetarian writer whose sanity balances precisely on the publication of his new story collection and on the fate of his Irish terrier.
FROM THE CRITICS
Gary Krist - Salon
Is Jay McInerney overrated or
underappreciated? Tough question. Certainly you
can make a convincing argument that his
reputation is as inflated as a Wall Street bonus:
After achieving instant luminary status with
Bright Lights, Big City, a funny but slight first
novel that happened to catch a tsunami-size
Zeitgeist wave, he produced a bevy of hyped
disappointments -- most recently The Last of the
Savages, a stiff, schematic attempt at "literary
seriousness" that stole shamelessly from the
Dead-White-Male English curriculum (F. Scott
Fitzgerald, Richard Yates, etc.). On the other
hand, McInerney also wrote what I consider the
best and most undervalued novel of 1980s
venality -- albeit a little tardily in 1992. Sure,
Brightness Falls got some strong reviews, but it
was too often considered a poor sibling of Tom
Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities, a book that
can't match Brightness's elegiac richness and
surprising depth of characterization.
Now, with Model Behavior, McInerney gives
more ammunition to his naysayers. Packaged
together with seven short stories, the title novel is
a sporadically entertaining comedy that ends up
trying for an emotional heft its thin plot line can't
support. Returning to his well-dissected turf of
downtown clubs and celebrity-haunted soirees,
McInerney chronicles the decline and fall of
Conner McKnight, a disgruntled journalist for a
fashion magazine called "CiaoBella!" Despite
having a $600 bank balance, Conner is the kind
of guy who utters comments like: "Actually, I've
never been a big Lafite fan." But don't let this
tone of condescension fool you; Conner is
actually suffering from a bad case of serotonin
envy. Always an obscure player in a world whose
Golden Rule is "Behave unto others as if they
were about to become incredibly famous," he
finds his already precarious social stock on the
verge of a nose dive. Philomena, his supermodel
girlfriend, is refusing to have sex with him,
apparently as a preface to moving out.
Meanwhile, his boss at CiaoBella! is threatening
to fire him for uncool behavior in public.
Hollywood stars have stopped returning his
phone calls. If he's not careful, he might even
have trouble getting a decent table at Union
Square Cafe.
As usual, McInerney writes with great wit and
verbal ingenuity. (My favorite line: "We moved to
New York -- which is to monogamy what the
channel changer is to linear narrative.") But the
book exudes an aura of disingenuousness that
dulls its satiric bite. McInerney is trying to parody
a world whose glamour, all ironic poses
notwithstanding, he obviously buys into. He's like
one of those ingrates at fashionable gatherings
who declaim ad nauseam against the boredom
and inanity of such events -- but who never seem
to turn down an invitation. And really,
lampooning supermodels, Hollywood actors and
media trend-slaves is a bit like shooting overfed
angelfish in a barrel. It all seems a little too easy.
Still, McInerney might have pulled it off if he
hadn't tried to get serious. Toward the end of the
novel, Conner's crash-and-burn begins to take on
a more earnest tone (somebody dear to him even
dies a violent death, but given how obnoxious the
character is, readers may greet this development
with relief). Then, as in his first novel,
McInerney tries to wrap things up on a note of
bogus redemption, with our hero renouncing the
triviality of his former existence in favor of a
simpler, more honest mode of life. In Bright
Lights, this redemption was symbolized by the
main character's trading his groovy Ray-Bans for
a bag of freshly baked bread. In Model
Behavior, Conner forswears celebrity journalism
and turns to what he considers a better, truer kind
of writing -- i.e., he starts work on a movie script
about his life.
A movie script? I guess it shows how far we've
come that screenwriting -- which used to
represent the ultimate sellout in novels like this --
has now become a kind of literary Peace Corps,
the salvation of choice for escapees from a world
even shallower than Hollywood.
Donna Seaman - Booklist
This brisk, thoroughly entertaining novel is followed by a set of impeccable short stories that extends McInerney's illumination of the ever confounding gap between image and reality. What makes McInerney so likable is the ingenuousness behind his cynicism. Even as he so wittily mocks the absurdity of the glamour industry, he is still enamored of the dreams it sells.
Jared Stern - New York Post
Like Bright Lights, Model Behavior is a quintessentially New York story. And like the city itself, McInerney's latest is bound to chafe in places. But no one who truly loves Manhattan in all its soiled beauty and shopworn glamour can fail to derive pleasure from this book.
Entertainment Weekly
. . .[A] sharp little novel (along with seven short stories). . . .Fame is the drug everyone in these pages is hooked on. . . .more than any of hsi fellow Brat Packers. ..McInerney is the real thing, a writer of undeniable flair and charm. . . .Frankly, it's a kick having McInerney back in town.
Walter Kirn - New York Magazine
. . .[T]he book's a Hong Kong counterfeit [of Bright Lights, Big City]: same cut, identical cloth, but weaker seams. . . .Whatever it is that Model Behavior is mocking. . .it doesn't mock it enough. . . .Seldom has the game of guess-who's-who been played so coarsely for such trivial stakes. Read all 19 "From The Critics" >