The first two Kritzer novels are, to me, the first installments of a biographical novel approaching Charles Dickens territory: eccentric humorous characters, bullies, false friends, love, and a young man on a quest to find his place in the cosmos. The book (meaning all three Kritzer novels) is reminescent of DAVID COPPERFIELD - whose eponymous hero has the same initials as his author - and I find something of GREAT EXPECTATIONS, and the good humor of THE PICKWICK PAPERS, there as well.
BENJAMIN KRITZER introduces the reader to its hero and his world, a look at 1950s Los Angeles both nostalgic and daunting; Bad Men, Martian parents, sibling rivalry, and a neurotic, lonely boy balancing losses and gains personally and universally, as he makes his way through a vanishing period of American life and grade school. This book is the caterpillar's life.
KRITZERLAND takes its hero through junior high school, betrayal by a friend preferring zircons to diamonds, more movies and popular song, as he enters his chrysalis stage before becoming the butterfly of the third. Benjamin's talents and interests begin shaping him.
The two Kritzer books, like any great novel, reveal universal truths, and gild their philosophic pill with a liberal dose of popular song, movies, and a liberal dose of humor and compassion. You'll laugh! You'll cry!