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The Little Friend

The Little Friend

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: the little friend was danny...
Review: I very much enjoyed the Secret History, but was a bit puzzled in the end. What happened in the woods?? Other than that, VERY nice job wrapping everything up.
As to The Little Friend... I like it, and think for themost part, reviewers are being too harsh.

Don't you remember when you were a kid, playing spy, fantasizing? I do have to say I was waiting for at least one more chapter when I got to the end. In this book, Ms. Tartt left too many ends dangling. Sure, it's nice to complete the story as suits you, but this time, way too many unanswered questions. Overall, I'd recommend it for summer time reading. Good "beach book"... slice of life that most of us are unfamiliar with...

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: More than a disappointment
Review: Like most readers, I looked forward to Tartt's second book, but I made myself wait until I could find a used copy. I'm sure glad I didn't pay full price! The Little Friend is a book that makes you want to skim pages to see if it eventually gets to the point. There are rambling descriptions of people, places and points of view that seem to have absolutly nothing to do with the story or character development. While these descriptions are often well written, in the end, I felt like they were a waste of time. I often found myself wondering if Tartt was trying to fill a book with a prescribed number of pages, to satisfy a publishing contract.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: who was the little friend?
Review: i agree with the other reviewer...a real disappointment after "the secret history." Actually, i may be biased, since i have a thing about "sick southern" books. the characters are wonderful, but their interactions are mysterious. the young heroine is almost unbelievable, and what happens to her in the end????

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Possibly the worst book ever written
Review: Ok, so it's not the worst book ever written (that coveted award goes to Martin Amis' "The Information") but it comes pretty darn close. At 300 pages in, I kept thinking that the book would surely start soon, after all this was Donna Tartt, it had to turn out to be great in the end right? Wrong. After 400+ pages I knew it was never going to amount to anything other than a high school student's attempt at Carl Hiaasen gone badly awry. Not only were the characters utterly unlikeable, many seemed to exist for no other reason than to... well exist. This is tosh of the higest order. No plot, no "journey" to follow, no wit and no fun.
Ms Tartt, I hear there are vacancies at Burger King.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: No sure why people don't love it
Review: I am in disbelief as to why people don't love this book. I am almost done with it, and I am so sad that it is going to end soon. If I have to wait 10 more years for another book by Donna Tartt, I will. Her writing takes my breath away. The ending is heart-pounding good. Please give it a try and make your own judgment.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: SO, what's the point??
Review: They say about the Secret History, Ms. Tartt's previous book, that if you can get through the first two-thirds, the rest is fantastic... and so it was. About The Little Friend they can say, if you can get through the book, you've read a crappy book. Although the character development was wonderful, and the descriptions of a dysfunctional southern family provided a lot of insights into human behavior and attitudes, I got to the end of the book asking myself if they publisher had neglected the last pages that would have provided a point to the book. It could have been a good mystery, but then, the mystery is never solved, and the reader is left wondering, "so what?"

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Wow -- Was this ever BAD!
Review: I will say this for Ms. Tartt -- I haven't had this strong a reaction to a book in a long time. Part of it is the hype. I really enjoyed The Secret History and thought of it as a sure bet for friends looking for a recommendation, so I had a fair amount of anticipation built up for a second Donna Tartt novel. Apparently, too much anticipation can lead to bitter disappointment.

1. This is not "To Kill a Mockingbird" (although it tries like hell). Although there is a young female protagonist spending a bored summer in the South and a mysterious man who becomes the subject of her 'investigation', the similarities end there. There are no great moral lessons, no though-provoking revelations on coming of age, (unless the fact that sometimes people are wrong is your idea of a grand "ah-ha!"), no heart-warming heroes. Speaking of which...
2. Even though the author piles on numerous and unnecessary tragedies to gain our sympathies, Harriet is not very likeable. But it's not really Harriet's fault - she and the people who populate her world tend to be one dimensional and inconsistent. Their actions and motives aren't true to themselves or true to their circumstances.
3. Of course, had there been actual character development, I'm sure this would have detracted from Ms. Tartt's lovely use of prose. Here's the thing, the writing would be a whole lot better if the author weren't so darn impressed with her own ability to structure a sentence.
4. On the other hand, there's no lack of action. It takes forever to communicate the story's events (mustn't interfere with the lovely sentences for the sake of writing), but there's seemingly no end to the ludicrous new developments that slowly unfold.
5. Finally, while others complain of the ending, I rejoiced that the pain was over. Sure, it's not the type of ending that the book jacket - or even the beginning of the story - leads you to expect - and really, that is fine, perfectly OK. But the reader is clearly meant to be impressed (again) by the author's cleverness - and that attitude - which is pervasive throughout - is what ultimately makes The Little Friend so very obnoxious and unpleasant.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: How awfull!
Review: At the outset, I have to state that Secret History was one of my favorite books. When so many years later, I heard that Donna Tartt was not a Harper Lee, I was truly excited and eagerly anticpated this release. Now I wish she had been a "one hit wonder." What an awfull book. I have struggled through 3/4 of this thing, trying not to be defeated by it's pompous and irrelevant description, lack of plot, and ultimate letdown (while reading this monstrosity, I have completed three other very satisfying books). Tartt starts off with a promising premise, but gets completely bogged down in self-indulgent descriptive asides that make this novel infuriating to read. I don't think one ever finds out who killed Robin, and quite frankly, I don't care...

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Less is more
Review: Seven months ago I put The Little Friend on my Christmas wish list and was thrilled when I received it as a gift. Seven months later I finally finished it and I think I owe my gift giver [$$$]! If this book was brilliant, I sure missed it.

Everything about this story was long and torturous. The sun-baked Mississippi landscape, the bible thumping, quasi-racist, emotionally clueless characters, the crazy-...premise and the anti-climactic climax which was no climax at all since that would imply a building of tension and action that begs for a resolution. Suffice it to say that 20 pages from the end, I was able to put the book down for the night and not pick it up again for two days, that's how much I didn't care about Harriet and the fate of her family.

I can say a lot more, but like The Little Friend, what's the point. Less is more. Read the first chapter, the last, and that's all you'll need. Everything in between is boring, long winded, depressing, and completely unnecessary.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Too Grotesque
Review: I could not finish this book. It kept spiraling downward with more grotesque and stereotypical characters on every page. I couldn't finish it.

I don't understand why the critics raved. Yuck.


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