|
Loading... A Patchwork Planet (Ballantine Reader's Circle)av Anne Tyler
LibraryThing-rekommendationerMedlemsrekommendationerIngen. Laddar...
kommer ogilla
kommer troligen ogilla
kommer troligen gilla
kommer gilla
kommer älska Anmäl dig till LibraryThing för att få reda på om du skulle tycka om den här boken. This book kept my interest. It's odd though, because it's not like anything really pulled me to this book, but the flow of it just kept me reading and reading and reading. This is the story of Barnaby, an outcast in his family, and his search for identity and contentment. I'm not sure I liked the ending, but it left me thinking about it a few days later, which is unusual for me. Wonderful characters. Kept my interest. Really love Tyler's writing. Barnaby, the black sheep, works for 'rent a back' and helps the elderly on an hourly basis. Lots of insights into older peoples' needs and a non-pretentious mans work in his simple world. Real people doing slightly off the wall things - she does this so well; lots to make you smile. The novel has left lots of pictures in my head of the places she describes so well. At 30, Barnaby Gaitlin has an ex-wife, a daughter with whom he has no meaningful relatinship, a juvenile criminal record, a family he can't stand to be around and a job. The job is "manual labor," providing a strong back to help the elderly and infirm of Baltimore, where he lives. Barnaby is a good guy, notwithstanding his past and his consistent refusal to conform to other's expectations of him. As the book unfolds, a new romance appears to be opening up for him--one that the reader will quickly suspect is not a good choice for him. Sub-plots abound as Barnaby's clients grow older, grow ill and die with depressing frequency and the reader shares his attachement to them. This is sweet book, easy to read and simple but leaving behind it an echo of complex issues that demand to be considered. inga recensioner | lägg till en recension
Referenser till detta verk hos externa resurser
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Bokbeskrivning |
|
(hämtat från Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)
Första testrundan har stängts. Gå till Open Shelves Classification-gruppen om du vill veta mer.
Snabblänkar |
Along comes Sophia, a school-marmish sort of woman, who, as is mentioned in the book, "each night scrubs her face, brushes her teeth & climbs- alone- into her four-poster-bed". Barnaby thinks Sophia is his guardian-angel (a tradition in his family) & forms a relationship with her, striving to be as good as she is. What he doesn't realise, until the end, is that Sophia's goodness is only skin-deep, while his own character & potential is more truthful & honest by far.
What stays with me after closing the book is first, the whole theme of goodness & the ability to give to others, which is explored beautifully, & second, Anne Tyler's thoughts about old-age & elderly people...very chilling, very true. Those chapters broke my heart but I thought they were true to life. (