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Formats
Paperback Details
  • 07/2022
  • 1952232694
  • 242 pages
  • $19.99
Timothy Gager
Author
Joe The Salamander

Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

Joe The Salamander follows Joe, a man with neuro-diversity , from birth through age thirty-five. Joe, a born people-pleaser, only chooses to say the word, "Yes," to everyone, except his mother, Millie, who he has unconditional trust with. The other woman in his life, Laura, his nurse on-duty at the time of his birth, becomes a life-long friend of his and his entire family. Joe, overwhelmed by loud or “busy” environments gets through life by wearing various costumes but identifies with Superman as his protector, in his various television/movie forms. As he gets older, he finds comfort by wearing Superman costumes under his regular clothing. It is only after his parents die tragically on 9/11 that Joe stops feeling safe using the Superman strategy, realizing that even Superman couldn't have prevented this occurrence. Throughout the novel, Joe's inability to successfully interpret life's sights and sounds, combined with his singular word language use, causes him to be placed in situations which work out in ways, he never intended. The book takes the reader through infancy, toddler, then through his school years, a large focus the difficult Middle School and High School social challenges. His mother tries to increase Joe's independence so he could eventually survive on his own, but after the death of both his parents in the World Trade Center on 9/11, Joe is left to figure out the world on his own. As he hits his mid-thirties, and entirely by the desperation surrounding his self-imprisoned life, he goes to the local costume shop to buy the bigger, and better Superman costume he had admired for years, to help him re-enter society using this old coping mechanism. Joe is arrested at the Salamander costume when he is mistaken for a worker at Super Salad. He is rescued by Laura, who is down and out since the death of Joe’s parents, rescues Joe and they end up supporting one another.
Reviews
This immersive, insightful novel from Gager surveys neurodiversity from both inside and outside, charting over the last years of the 20th century the development of a boy named Joe, who stands out from the pack at birth—the first week of his life, Joe never once cries, until a nurse is tasked with the harrowing duty of forcing him to, to be sure that he can. To please her, Joe bawls. Joe’s notably bright, an early reader obsessed with Superman, but the stimuli of the world overwhelms him, as do the rules governing basic social interactions. To make life easier, to please the people whose expectations he can’t quite understand, young Joe decides that his first word—“yes”—will mostly be his only word, as only his mother ever hears him saying anything else.

That might sound fanciful, like the start of a fabulist novel, but Gager’s thoughtful, episodic narrative is committed to life as it’s lived, in striking, persuasive, and occasionally exhaustive detail. While scenes of young Joe’s public embarrassments (a disaster at the grocery store) and surprise triumphs (his spell as a school mascot involves some inspired prop comedy) compel, the storytelling tends toward the explanatory rather than the dramatic, as Gager lays out in clear, vivid prose the family and relationship histories of Joe’s parents, and the aspirations and tumultuous romantic life of that friendly nurse who once had to make Joe cry.

Gager reveals Joe’s drift of mind with acute sensitivity and a welcome lack of linguistic theatrics, dipping readers into his head (for inspired thoughts on Superman, say, or his spiraling worries that the popular couple at school who protects him from bullies might break up) while also depicting Joe’s mother’s urgent drive to help him develop independence. A sense of looming tragedy gives the coming-of-age narrative added cohesion, one that readers will feel coming but the characters don’t. The conclusion, though, is both hopeful and surprising.

Takeaway: Deftly handled novel of neurodiversity and coming of age.

Comparable Titles: Katherine May’s The Electricity of Every Living Thing, Hilary Reyl’s Kids Like Us.

Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 07/2022
  • 1952232694
  • 242 pages
  • $19.99
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