Vintage:
A Ghost Story by Steve Berman
Review by Jean Roberta
A
good novel about teenagers is hard to find. The ones written by
precocious teenage authors are likely to seem raw around the edges,
and the ones written by adults are likely to sound patronizing
or formula-driven. Vintage is that rare thing, an interesting
novel about teenagers as complex human beings with emotional depth
and an awareness of their place in history. These kids are all
right, Goth style and all.
The seventeen-year-old male narrator knows that his parents would
never accept his sexual orientation (gay), which is why he lives
with his Aunt Jan, who is generous and accepting but a terrible
cook. His best friend, a girl named Trace, lives with her distracted
father and younger brother, Second Mike, in a house that seems
to be haunted by an older son, the first Mike, who disappeared
years before, sending the mother of the family into a downward
spiral that led her to the mental hospital where she has lived
for years. Liz, a lesbian friend, has rich parents who are rarely
home; they work long hours and travel without their daughter.
These kids are virtual orphans, but they are refreshingly free
of self-pity. The understated narrative style brings the reader
into their lives without drama.
The novel is organized like a diary, in which each chapter is
named for a day of the week. The reader follows the narrator,
learning that his time with friends (especially with Trace, whom
he admires for her grace and style) is the high point of an average
day.
The narrator has temporarily dropped out of high school and found
an undemanding job as assistant to an eccentric man who runs a
vintage clothing store. In some sense, the narrator has dropped
out of time after a failed suicide attempt. He agrees with Aunt
Jan's opinion that he needs a GED, but he has no desire to return
to the conformist torture of high school. For the meanwhile, he
is drawn to the funerals of people he never knew and to the clothing
styles of forty years before (the late 1950s), which he can always
borrow from the shop where he works.
The narrator's personal brush with death, his attraction to other
boys and his interest in the past seem to open the veil between
the worlds which normally seems to prevent contact between the
dead and the living. A high school athlete in vintage clothes,
with poster-quality good looks, appears on a lonely stretch of
highway and speaks to the narrator. Will this brief meeting lead
to a too-good-to-be-true relationship between a popular guy and
a geek?
The narrator asks Trace what she knows, and he learns the history
of the handsome boy, Josh, who seems to be stuck in an eternal
purgatory of walking home, night after night, without ever reaching
his destination. With appealing modesty, the narrator wonders
why Josh would be attracted to him. He only asks later whether
it is fatal for a live mortal to be sexually attracted to a ghost.
For better and worse, other people and events demand the narrator's
attention. His increasing knowledge of the circumstances that
led Josh to walk down the highway night after night makes him
aware of how the past has influenced the present. His ability
to communicate with the dead leads to a terrifying but enlightening
evening in the local cemetery, and to a determination to help
First Mike and the rest of his family learn what happened to him
and come to terms with it.
The narrator is amazed to realize that he is not only wanted
by a ghost but by a live boy as well. After a cuddly but chaste
night with a guest in his bed, the narrator creeps down the hall
to find out if his aunt is home. He returns to a surprise:
I found him already dressed and smoothing the folded covers.
I stood in the doorway, blinking at the sight. He had made my
bed. He had made my bed! I think that was the first time that
had ever been done—I mean, no matter where I lived, the
bed simply stayed perpetually slept in.
The narrator is becoming aware of what it would be like to live—in
every sense of the word—with someone who cares
for him. This awareness helps him decide what to do. By the time
the conflict between life (change) and death (stagnation) reaches
its highest point, the reader is cheering for the narrator and
his developing relationships with other live people.
By the conclusion, the narrator seems to be headed toward a relatively
happy future, but he can never forget the presence of something
beyond the visible present. His boyfriend tells him:
“I love your costume.” He took a sip of his
hot chocolate.
I looked down at myself. I wore my normal basic black.
I gave him a quizzical look.
“Just you, silly.”
I smiled and leaned in real close, so close that my lips
brushed against his ear. “I love you back,” I said
softly. I hoped he was the only one who heard me.
The world of this novel has the charm and unpredictability of
real life. Be warned: this story will haunt you for much longer
than it takes to read.
Read
an excerpt from Vintage: A Ghost
Story
Read an Interview with Steve
Berman
Click HERE from more reviews...

Jean Roberta loves books. She has
taught first-year English classes in a Canadian prairie university
since the Jurassic Age, and writes in several genres. Over fifty
of her erotic stories have been published in print anthologies,
including the annual Best Lesbian Erotica (2000-01 and
every year since 2004) and websites, including "Ruthie's
Club," as well as print journals such as Harrington Lesbian
Literary Quarterly. Her reviews appear regularly in newsletter-style
erotic journal Batteries Not Included, and websites "The
Shadow Sacrament," "The Dominant's View," "TCM
Reviews," "Clean Sheets," and "Girlphoria."
Watch for her reviews on the new site, "Erotica Revealed,"
to go live in May 2007.