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The Walking Tour

The Walking Tour

List Price: $23.00
Your Price: $23.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: a strangely unsatisfying read...
Review: A confusing and, in the end, an unsatisfying read. Susan, the (now) adult daughter of a couple who have long since passed on, goes back through diaries, letters, and other things to sort out for herself (it seems) the day in Wales when her mother died (or was killed?). While the potential was there to give us a romping good mystery, Davis gets the reader all glopped up with unnecessary dialogue and seemingly missing information in our efforts to understand what is happening. The story surrounds two American couples, (with long sordid pasts with each other) the husbands are business partners, who take a trip to Wales for a walking tour of the region. There are other characters involved, a couple of single women, the couple who runs the tours (and the B&B where they are all staying), etc... but they are put forth in an unsatisfactory manner. Finally, there is a very vague undercurrent that suggests that Susan is living in some sort of anarchic or fascist state as, perhaps (we never know) a result of the computer work her father and the other man did. In any case, I agree with one reviewer of this novel who said, it might have been saved with some editing. I found it very hard to follow.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unpretentious, rigorous, imaginative fiction
Review: Kathryn Davis's book is wiser about our future -- really our present -- than UNDERWORLD. Hers is a fiercely moral view, as strange as it is accessible, as innovative as it is traditional. It's a heady mix. Following to an extent the conventions of the upper-middle-class-white-philanderers-narrative, she raises questions of identity, text, and defends the not-quite-stabilizing, not-quite-liberatory imperative of art. A mysterious and -- yes! -- delightful read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Feast Not a Happy Meal
Review: Kathryn Davis's The Walking Tour is an ambitious exploration of the human urge to understand the present as the product of the past. Who writes the histories, tells the stories, makes the myths that humans embrace as they attempt to make sense of existence? The answer, this novel suggests, is that it's just ordinary people who do, ordinary people just like those of us reading the novel.

Susan Rose narrates Davis's complex mosaic of Welsh myth, contemporary painting, computer technology, and the timeless passions of human beings: greed, lust, love, envy, the urge to create art. Susan attempts to understand what caused the disastrous and fatal events that transpired during a walking tour of Wales undertaken by her parents, Bobby, a wealthy and powerful internet magnate, and Carole, a world-renowned painter who has struggled with schizophrenia her whole life; and their friends, Coleman Snow, Bobby's business partner, and Ruth Farr, his would-be novelist wife. Relying upon a variety of documentary sources'Ruth's digital journal, Coleman's vacation photos, Carole's picture postcards, and the transcript of a civil lawsuit that followed the tour, Susan struggles to piece together a coherent vision of what happened, why it happened, and what it means.

The novel's brilliance resides in Davis's adept handling of a complex narrative over which she never loses control. The story unfolds as a mystery of sorts, but what makes it memorable is how Davis places her readers in the same position as Susan Rose: we too must attempt to create a myth, tell ourselves a story, create a history that will account for the information we encounter. And that's no easy task. The novel invites misreadings and even at times may frustrate us. However, it would be quite a challenge for any reader to dig into her or his own past in the way Susan does without becoming frustrated and confused at times. Why should Susan's search be any easier for readers than it is for her?

The novel's use of Welsh mythology produces a resonance and depth to the story: Susan'and her readers'are doing no more and no less than the Welsh themselves when they created the myths that lent meaning to their own past and present. The Walking Tour' does not serve up a bland, easy-to-digest Happy Meal but instead offers a feast. Readers will need to be alert and will have to concentrate on the text, but for those who do, the reward is a memorable experience. A terrific book for readers who welcome ambiguity and depth in their reading.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Feast Not a Happy Meal
Review: Kathryn Davis�s The Walking Tour is an ambitious exploration of the human urge to understand the present as the product of the past. Who writes the histories, tells the stories, makes the myths that humans embrace as they attempt to make sense of existence? The answer, this novel suggests, is that it�s just ordinary people who do, ordinary people just like those of us reading the novel.

Susan Rose narrates Davis�s complex mosaic of Welsh myth, contemporary painting, computer technology, and the timeless passions of human beings: greed, lust, love, envy, the urge to create art. Susan attempts to understand what caused the disastrous and fatal events that transpired during a walking tour of Wales undertaken by her parents, Bobby, a wealthy and powerful internet magnate, and Carole, a world-renowned painter who has struggled with schizophrenia her whole life; and their friends, Coleman Snow, Bobby�s business partner, and Ruth Farr, his would-be novelist wife. Relying upon a variety of documentary sources�Ruth�s digital journal, Coleman�s vacation photos, Carole�s picture postcards, and the transcript of a civil lawsuit that followed the tour, Susan struggles to piece together a coherent vision of what happened, why it happened, and what it means.

The novel�s brilliance resides in Davis�s adept handling of a complex narrative over which she never loses control. The story unfolds as a mystery of sorts, but what makes it memorable is how Davis places her readers in the same position as Susan Rose: we too must attempt to create a myth, tell ourselves a story, create a history that will account for the information we encounter. And that�s no easy task. The novel invites misreadings and even at times may frustrate us. However, it would be quite a challenge for any reader to dig into her or his own past in the way Susan does without becoming frustrated and confused at times. Why should Susan�s search be any easier for readers than it is for her?

The novel�s use of Welsh mythology produces a resonance and depth to the story: Susan�and her readers�are doing no more and no less than the Welsh themselves when they created the myths that lent meaning to their own past and present. The Walking Tour� does not serve up a bland, easy-to-digest Happy Meal but instead offers a feast. Readers will need to be alert and will have to concentrate on the text, but for those who do, the reward is a memorable experience. A terrific book for readers who welcome ambiguity and depth in their reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Important, Brilliant Novelist
Review: People will be reading, studying and writing about Kathryn Davis for many, many years. Her work is playful, complex and exceedingly intelligent--incomparably precise. Part Henry James, part Virginia Woolf, completely original. The tone of this novel is so strange and original it is hard to describe, but its caginess is part of its massive appeal. Kathryn Davis will in the future be considered one of our most important novelists without a doubt.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Irritatingly vague
Review: There are so many interesting threads in this novel,wonderfully mysterious characters,and a compelling fantastical shift from the misty ancient past to the murky near future. However,there are too many threads,so that some are left dangling while others get all tangled leaving the reader wondering just what to make of this very clever but ultimately messy novel.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: I Can't Read this Book
Review: Thirty years ago when I was in college I had to muddle through difficult books. What does the author REALly mean? Who is the main character supposed to portray? I used to sit in the dorm and dream of the days when I could read what I wanted; for pleasure.

I love to read sentences that flow together, about characters that are real and varied, and indulge myself in plots that are interesting yet ones that a chart is not needed to follow.

After 120 pages of The Walking Tour I did not know one character, I did not know what the plot was about and had to force myself to concentrate or else be forced to read the same line 4 times to REALly understand it.

This book struck me as a college read from freshman year. It was cumbersome. The cover flap was intriguing. That was the only intriguing part. I quite and went on to something else, something that I VERY seldom do.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: I Can't Read this Book
Review: Thirty years ago when I was in college I had to muddle through difficult books. What does the author REALly mean? Who is the main character supposed to portray? I used to sit in the dorm and dream of the days when I could read what I wanted; for pleasure.

I love to read sentences that flow together, about characters that are real and varied, and indulge myself in plots that are interesting yet ones that a chart is not needed to follow.

After 120 pages of The Walking Tour I did not know one character, I did not know what the plot was about and had to force myself to concentrate or else be forced to read the same line 4 times to REALly understand it.

This book struck me as a college read from freshman year. It was cumbersome. The cover flap was intriguing. That was the only intriguing part. I quite and went on to something else, something that I VERY seldom do.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It's all in the visuals
Review: This book was recommended as a NY Times notable book which I trusted. The book reads like the first novel of a very "sensitive, artistic" under-grad writing student. There are a lot of pretentious descriptions and the hint at an interesting story but it is entirely unsatisfying and you realize just past the half way mark it's not getting better.


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