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The Corrections: A Novel

The Corrections: A Novel

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: My Book Club agreed...
Review: My Book Club agreed... that we'd rather poke our eyes out with forks than finish this book. It was disturbing, disjointed, unappealing and a waste of good money. A few of our members even returned their books to bookstores halfway through. However, it does make a handy door stop.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Loved it and hated it
Review: I have a real love/hate relationship with this book. On the love side, Franzen is an excellent writer, and for the most part, he keeps you interested and the story hums along. There are moments of extreme clarity and poignancy in the story...especially those involving Enid and Alfred. Alfred's parkinson is dealt frankly and unflinchingly.
But on the hate side, I feel like Franzen talks down to his reader and definitely comes across as superior. Also, some of the situations are simply too far-fetched and unbelievable (Chip's trip to Lithuania stands out).
Overall, I would say that I liked the book. I guess that Franzen on some level has succeeded on writing a book that is at turns frustrating, thought-provoking and compelling...all at once.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: whoa Nellie!
Review: This is one of the best books I have read in a few years, since English Passengers. It's not often that someone can hash over the old family saga and bring up such fresh and human material. A friend told me that Jonathan Franzen went on a bit, but he is worth listening to and reading. On a more mundane point, does "mixed grill" really exist? Let's hope not.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Expansive, Undisciplined
Review: This book makes a lot of promises that it ultimately cannot keep. Franzen peers into some interesting aspects of culture, family life and behavior but ultimately leaves us with a rather shallow interpretation of all of them. The language is quite beautiful and the book is immensely readable, but the plotting is virtually non-existent and -- where it exists -- uninspired. At 568 pages, the novel displays a lot of breadth but a shocking lack of depth. Ultimately, we are left with simplicities like "Gary is afraid." This kind of thing is hardly worth waiting for. Three stars for the language and prose construction. Pleasant but quite overrated.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Life is too short to waste your time reading this book!
Review: Less than 200 pages into it, I just returned this book to the library and am thanking the good Lord I didn't spend [money on] it. ... But I don't like any of the characters so it is quite hard for me to pick up the book and find out what happens next - Because I just don't care!

For the life of me, I just can't figure out why there is so much hype about this book. It's a bizarre read - which I enjoy - the likes of Toni Morrison, for one - but this book is just boring. ...

Life is too short to waste your time on this one.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Is it me, or am I missing the point?
Review: I'm about two-thirds of the way through "The Corrections," and, seriously, I must be missing the point. Granted, this is pretty wicked satire, and the characters are so thoroughly dislikable, I'm just compelled to read on to find out how they can further screw up their lives. In addition, I've got to give credit to Franzen's writing skills, he's sharp as a tack, creative, and very imagistic. But here's the caveat about his writing...it reminds me of Whitney Houston's singing. Now Whitney has a great voice, but she just overdoes it with all of those vocal gymnastics. Same with Franzen. I can just imagine the pleasure he received from twisting a phrase here, creating a skewering metaphor there. I guess what I'm trying to write here is that in terms of story or plot, I just don't get his point. Last night I read about how Alfred, in his state of dementia aboard a cruise ship, has an imaginary conversation with a turd...yes a turd!!... I'm not sure I'm going to finish the book, as I'm curious to move on to Empire Falls. I'm glad I didn't purchase the book...I borrowed it from the library. Do I recommend it? Probably not, but if you're curious like I was wondering what all the fuss was about, it might be worth skimming. In fact, I think I'll skim through to the end of the book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: mediocre...yawn
Review: This book was just not that well written, despite the critical acclaim. Was an interesting read, believable dialogue. Parts of the plot were just boring and mediocre (Gary's adventures abroad), etc. etc.
Mediocre. Better than most of the stuff pumped through these days, is why I think some critics went ga ga over it. And not very funny either, despite the many attempts at both subtle and overt humor. I give it three yawns out of 5. And is this really what is considered good prose nowadays?

yawn.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: WHY?
Review: I made it to page 80 and just couldn't go any further. WHY, oh WHY did Oprah want to honor this book?

I gave it one star because the author knows how to put sentences together reasonably well. That's the only reason.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't Bother
Review: This dreary book is one long chapter about slow, sluggish, dysfuctional family life. There are no chapter breaks which makes material as dull as this very difficult to read. I tried to get through all 568 pages of it, but decided life was too short and stopped at page 478. (So, see, I really tried to get through all of it.) This is probably one of the worst books I have purchased in many years. Sorry.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Succeeds despite itself
Review: "The Corrections" introduces us to the Lambert family, who take "dysfunctional" to new, satiric, levels. The plot, such as it is, centers on mother Edith's efforts to get her grown children home to the Midwestern town of St. Jude (get it?) for one last Christmas together before her husband Alfred loses control of his body and mind to Parkinson's disease. But don't expect much by way of linear storytelling - the author focuses on the details of each of the characters' lives in turn, weaving a tapestry of commentary on American family life at the turn of the millennium. I was initially put off by the author's ironic, hipper-than-thou attitude, and way he seemed to invite us to join him in condescending to his characters. However, I stuck with it, and found a surprisingly compassionate tale of how the characters became who they are, in the context of both the family system and the wider world, and what happens when they finally stop trying to "correct" their lives.


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