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The Last Thing He Wanted |
List Price: $18.00
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Reviews |
Rating:  Summary: A way with words... Review: I bought this novel from a bargain bin (because of the cover design), put it on a shelf, and didn't open it for over a month. When I finally picked it up, I read only twelve pages before I grabbed my highlighter... The writing style is deceptively simple and highly structured--breathtaking, actually. And the story is fantastic (and well told). Highly recommended.
Rating:  Summary: A way with words... Review: I bought this novel from a bargain bin (because of the cover design), put it on a shelf, and didn't open it for over a month. When I finally picked it up, I read only twelve pages before I grabbed my highlighter... The writing style is deceptively simple and highly structured--breathtaking, actually. And the story is fantastic (and well told). Highly recommended.
Rating:  Summary: Irritating story telling. Review: I like this writer but I didn't like this book. I found her voice/method of telling the story very irritating and hard to follow. It is probably a good story but not told well. It might be a good movie.
Rating:  Summary: Slouching Towards Reaganism Review: I'm a fan of Didion's pitch-perfect deadpan prose, but if you aren't, there are other joys in this novel. It offers a post-Orwellian assessment, in human, personal terms, of 1984, with a particular focus on the Fourth of July on an unnamed Caribbean island. Along with Don DeLillo's "The Names," Didion's novel is a masterpiece of American paranoia. It offers a dark yet plausible scenario of the collapse of American democracy under the weight of expansionist ambitions, mass media, and the stunning sang-froid of the silent majorities. A bit confusing at times, the novel is psychologically (and syntactically) complicated but apparently well researched--it is also very confrontational, relentless in its outrage and hopelessness.
Rating:  Summary: I loved it, but one little thing bothered me... Review: If there was a church devoted to Joan Didion, I would worship there every Sunday. I think she's probably the greatest living nonfiction writer, and her fiction, too, is usually masterful and devilishly witty. I adored "Democracy" and "A Book of Common Prayer."
I hate to sound politically correct, but one thing bothered me about "The Last Thing He Wanted": the lisping, blowsy, faggot hotel proprietor on the deserted island where Elena McMahon ends up before she's killed. This guy minces around talking about all the bathhouses where he's had sex with foreign men, listening to opera (what was it, Madame Butterfly?), and screeching show tunes. I don't understand why Didion would throw such a low stereotype into her story--surely she could have imagined a more complex, multidimensional gay man. For me, this diminished the credibility of the whole book. In a way, it's suggestive of the way Didion treats all her fictional characters when she's not at her best: as pop-up illustrations of the point she's trying to make. It's not quite human, and not quite satisfying.
Rating:  Summary: The Last Thing He Wanted Review: Joan Didion's The Last Thing He Wanted is a mysterious, gentle little book that ultimately is quite sad. Elena McMahon does a favour for her father and through that favour and through her we see the large unfathomable world of conspiraces and esponiage boiled to very human elements. There is a cold spareness to the writing that left this reader unmoved until after it was over and then the sadness powerfully washed over me. It is an unique and haunting look at the choices people make and the lives and events that one can affect with simple, irrevocable gestures. A beautiful novel.
Rating:  Summary: Momentous Events Writ Small Review: Joan Didion's The Last Thing He Wanted is a mysterious, gentle little book that ultimately is quite sad. Elena McMahon does a favour for her father and through that favour and through her we see the large unfathomable world of conspiraces and esponiage boiled to very human elements. There is a cold spareness to the writing that left this reader unmoved until after it was over and then the sadness powerfully washed over me. It is an unique and haunting look at the choices people make and the lives and events that one can affect with simple, irrevocable gestures. A beautiful novel.
Rating:  Summary: Disappointed Review: This book has a great story to tell, but through the stalling and back-telling the powerfulness of the message is lost. I found that I had to force myself to finish hoping to be swept away by the ending, but was instead left wondering what I had missed. The narrative is confusing and lacks any passion on the subject at hand. However I believe this could be an intriguing movie.
Rating:  Summary: Disappointed Review: This book has a great story to tell, but through the stalling and back-telling the powerfulness of the message is lost. I found that I had to force myself to finish hoping to be swept away by the ending, but was instead left wondering what I had missed. The narrative is confusing and lacks any passion on the subject at hand. However I believe this could be an intriguing movie.
Rating:  Summary: The Last Thing He Wanted Review: This book was absolutely not good! It never made any sense and skipped around that by the time it got back to a certain person, you had already forgotten who they were and why they were significant! I just read a review and they said it was a romeo and juliet book, i had no idea the main character was even in love, much less there was a second main character! If you have nothing to do for days, and time to write down every character and their significance, read this book, otherwise, really don't waste your time!
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