Tales of this city
January 9th, 2007 Emily - Lakeview
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Take the classic Tales of the City series by Armistead Maupin, bring it to Madison, set it on Willy St. instead of in Mrs. Madrigal’s apartment building and change the decade from the 1970s to the 1980s. Instantly, you’ve created the book Madlands by J. Allen Kirsch. Kirsch’s book follows a group of loosely related characters through academia, sexuality, religion, jobs, drugs, weather and many events you may have experienced if you have ever lived in Madison, Wisconsin. If it’s UW or Madison related it’s probably mentioned in this novel: from the Farmer’s Market, beers at the Union, walking down State Street, shopping at the Willy Street Co-op and the annual summer Art Fair to little things like the view of the lake from the Capitol before the Monona Terrace was built (which is funny to think about now).
I enjoyed this book although there were some story issues - some lagged and others were dropped when the characters were no longer part of another’s story. In the end though, it was really fun to get to read a good fiction book about the city I call home because The Dive from Clausen’s Pier totally doesn’t count.
Entry Filed under: Recreational Fiction
2 Comments Add your own
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include("adsense.php"); ?>1. katharine | January 9th, 2007 at 12:48 pm
the screen version of “tales of the city” is worth watching too for the groovy soundtrack alone. the library owns those dvds.
they are filming a independent movie called “madison” right now in town, maybe it will one day be the equivalent of this classic.
2. Emily | January 10th, 2007 at 9:27 am
I’ve seen most of the Tales of the City mini-series, they show them on Showtime once in a while and they’re well done and true to the books. I’ll have to look out for “Madison”, it sounds good.
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