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A Man in Full

A Man in Full

List Price: $28.95
Your Price: $19.69
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hilarious, and Not Nearly Long Enough
Review: A rather sad thing has just happened to me. I finished Thomas Wolfe's "Man in Full" Why is that sad? Because for the past several weeks (with a full time job, kids, a house, numerous animals to care for I don't have a lot of time to read) I have totally lost myself in this book. At first the sheer size of it was daunting - most very long books become wearisome towards the end. Not so "A Man in Full". Wolfe has taken several plots, very different and apparently unrelated and alternated their development in relatively rapid cycles, as they progress to their inevitable convergence as the book comes to a close. Each sub-plot on its own would have made a good book. Wolfe's acidic tongue and flawless sense of satire ensures that. But to enjoy several sub-plots weaving seamlessly back and forth, wondering how on earth all these characters will somehow connect, is what makes this book so readable. This is one of those "laugh aloud" books. The characters, no matter how wicked or flawed, are totally entertaining. It is Thomas Wolff as I remember him in "Bonfire of the Vanities" and "Electric Koolaid Acid Test". As I finished the last paragraph, I felt almost compelled to say "good bye" to all the characters I had come to know so well, so much did I feel a part of the story. If you have a lot of time you can probably read this book fairly quickly. Each story line moves quickly enough so that the reader is never bored. If you are like me, and have fairly limited reading time, don't worry. I actually was grateful not to have to rush through the book. And now I feel like I'm leaving a really fun party before I'm quite ready to do so! Thomas Wolff, you have done it again. What a fun and enjoyable read!!!!!!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Arguably a good book.
Review: Tom Wolfe is arguably one of our best contemporary writers. His book "A Man in Full" reflects the arguably part.

The story and the plot surrounding Charlie Crocker along with his ethical dilemas prove to be one of the highlights of the book. On the other hand, his focus on Conrad H.'s stoic obsession is hardly believable and bearable.

All in all, it is a good book, but some of the characters need further depth and realism. Also, he has a tendency to drag certain eventas or actions for much longer than necessary.

Then again his work is able to acomplish two main things almost flawlessly: First, he describes today's Atlanta Elite (and if you think it through, you can really see any modern cities high classes) down to the minor details and describing things only they would know. Second, he is able to prove that the values and principles guiding our society's actions are not only flexible, but able to bring the best of us when his spirit and morals are under trial.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Old School Fun Read
Review: OK - yes we do have kind of a deux ex machina ending. And yes, the characters do seem to fall together in a fairly (extremely) unlikely way. But so what?! That's the way the best Dickens and Twain novels worked too, if you'll remember. In that respect I found the book refreshingly "old fashioned" and incredibly fun to read. I also really liked the fact that a character could be so inspired by such an unusual philosophical school (the Stoics), as opposed to something more conventional like Budhism or Christianity, and to see where that takes us.

My main criticism of the book is that it echoed Bonfire of the Vanities a little too closely -- Big City mayor gets into racial trouble at election time, a big speech is necessary to fix things, etc. But never mind that; I enjoyed this one a lot more than BOTV and definitely recommend it.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Does it profit a man to gain the world but lose his soul
Review: In the eyes of the world, Charlie Croker (ex-football star), had it all, a position in the society of Atlanta, wealth, a young wife, a well staffed 29,000 acre plantation . But at 60 years of age, Charlie was in grave danger of losing it all. The bank notes were overdue (36 million) due on demand by the bank. He was told to liquefy his assets, which meant his plantation, his aircratfs, his Mercedes. Charlie didn't know where to turn, he was caught, there was no way out, or was there?

On the west coast lived Conrad Hensley, married with two children. Conrad was very well respected by his co-workers but his wife and mother-in-law treated Conrad in a very demeaning manner. Nothing Conrad did was right and they were determined that he would never amount to anything. Conrad lived from paycheck to paycheck and one payday also received a pink slip, he was no longer needed. Charlie Croker's Global Foods was trimming the payroll and Conrad with his on going bad luck just got luckier. Events that Conrad had no control over seem to push him on the brink and he somehow found himself in prison. If you have ever had a car towed, you will appreciate this very hilarious train of events and become very compassionate towards Conrad.

In the meantime in Atlanta, a pro football player was accused with date raping a daughter of a prominent family. Enter Charlie Croker, who was given an ultimatum, speak to this football player, do a press conference with the idea of

showing the public that this was a tragedy that befalls popular athletes and that most of these athletes have many of these encounters where young girls push themselves into these situations. If Charlie agrees to this press conference the mayor of Atlanta will see to it that the Plantation Bank will get off his back about the bank notes.

On the west coast an earthquake strikes the prison area and Conrad finds himself on the streets with a fellow inmate and ends up in Atlanta. He stumbles onto an elderly couple who rent him a room and in this room discovers "the book" that will change his and Charlie Croker's life.

Charlie and Conrad meet when Charlie is recovering from knee surgery. Here is where both men have what you would call "an epiphany".

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Sometimes you can judge a book by its cover....
Review: I should have received a clue that this was going to be a pompous, over-written disaster of a book when the author's name was written in text 5 times taller than the title of the book.

The characters were unlikeable, the story was barely enthralling and it was pretty evident at the end that either Wolfe had become bored or his editor had told him to wrap it up because I have seen less predictable and convenient endings on Scobby Doo.

I bought this book for $1 at a yard sale and I barely think I got my money's worth. The most interesting thing for me were the descriptions of Atlanta, and even those Wolfe managed to get wrong in several places. What I wouldn't do to have the week it took me to read this drivvle back.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Phenomenal Read
Review: I found this story to be rich with characters, humor and insights into the old boy network. What a great weaving of multiple stories all neatly tied up at the end. This was a great body of work.

I have to say that the performance of David Ogden Stiers made listening to this far more enjoyable than it would have been with an ordinary reader. Whether he was voicing an Atlanta good-old boy, a middle-aged black man or a young vietnamese he was right on and you truly believed you were listening to separate characters. Flawless delivery by Stiers.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: overwritten mess
Review: As a huge fan of Tom Wolfe and an Atlantan, I am sad to report that this book is pointless, overwritten and lacking virtually any plot. After 500 plus pages of character development, we finally get to what passes for action. The problem is, you don't really care what happens to anyone and you know Wolfe can't possibly wrap this up in the final 200 pages. And he doesn't. He needs an epilogue for that. Did no editor dare tell the emperor he has no clothes? This is not to say there aren't passages of great Tom Wolfe writing, particularly when he delves into the life of his main character Charlie Croker. But please, Mr. Wolfe...you don't need to impress us with how much you learned driving around Atlanta neighborhoods.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A mishmash of ideas in search of a connection
Review: As a longtime Georgia resident, I was eagerly anticipating how Tom Wolfe would portray Atlanta in his latest opus - and came away disappointed. It's not that he was overtly condescending toward our city (although he clearly doesn't offer it the same reverence as he does, say, New York), but if he was going to write an entire novel about Atlanta, I sure wish he'd picked a better novel.

"A Man in Full" is a whole bunch of sprawling plot lines, themes and ideas without anything plausible to hold them together. It's almost as if Wolfe sat down and said, "OK, I know I want to write a book about Atlanta, and big business, and the philosophy of Epictetus, and prison life, and college football, and..." But he got started on the book way before he came up with any way to tie up all the loose ends. By the time you're getting to the end, you start to wonder "How the hell is all this going to come together?" as if you're watching a characteristically convoluted episode of "Seinfeld." The only difference is that the writers of "Seinfeld" usually managed to find a funny, ingenious way to wrap things up. Wolfe doesn't, and you end up feeling like you consumed 700 pages of manic build-up to get to a completely anticlimactic, unworthy ending.

It doesn't help that, as a few other reviewers have stated, there's really nobody to root for here. Certainly not Charlie Croker, whom Wolfe seems to want to portray as a heroic throwback to the days "when men were men." Maybe Wolfe longs for those days, but Croker certainly doesn't inspire the same longing in the reader - he may have money and a storied past, but he's little more than an old fool.

Somewhere in the midst of all these unsavory characters and unrelated themes and events there's a decent novel, but Wolfe approached his completely backwards. Those who aren't familiar with Atlanta probably won't get a picture that's a whole lot clearer from "A Man in Full"; those of us who are will just have to sit back and hope that the next time someone decides to write a massive novel about Atlanta, they make it a whole lot more entertaining.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: This Horse Pulls Up Lame Before The Finish Line
Review: An ambitious undertaking, Tom Wolfe's novel starts by introducing several, very distinct characters, and expertly weaving their stories together. The complex storyline keeps you guessing, blending suspense and humor. Wolfe has populated a world with memorable characters (Cap'm Charlie Croker & his trophy wife, Serena, Conrad, Roger Too White, Ray Peepgass and so many others), that will live on in the reader's memory. Turpmtine Plantation feels like a very real place. Then, with the suddenness of a car wreck, the story lurches to an awkward and disappointing conclusion. It's a crying shame that Wolfe tries to wrap up an over 700-page novel in one chapter using a two-way Q&A conversation. A tremendous let-down...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A "6" On A Scale Of "1 thru 5"
Review: What an accomplishment! To write a story that ties together: Charles Croker, a 60 y.o. Atlanta real estate broker who is in danger of losing his billion dollar fortune; Conrad Hensley, an idealistic, laid-off follower of the Stoic, Epicetus; Fareek Fanon, an Afro-American college football star alleged to have raped the daughter of Iman Armholster, a leader of the white community; and Roger Too White an Afro-American lawyer on the rise. Throw in a variety of other uniquely described stereotypical characters and you have the ingedients for a masterpiece. Read with enthusiasm and slow enough to savor the descriptions of people, places, things and situations, this book ranks right up there with the best. The teachings of Epicetus and the feelings of Charlie, who at 60 questions the meaning of his life were particularly relevant and powerful. I will often refer back to this story and read a page or two just to get a chuckle and see the beauty of the English language in the hands of a brilliant wordsmith. Postscript: If you have the opportunity to listen to the audio tape you won't be disappointed. Ralph Ogden Stiers does a brilliant job of capturing the essence of each character.


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