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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
More like a short story collection than a novel,
This review is from: The Imperfectionists (Hardcover)
I bought this book based on the glowing reviews I'd read in the media. However, I found myself enjoying it less and less as I read. By the half-way point, I had to psych myself up to read it. Normally the writing style is what lets a book down for me, but I found Rachman's style unobtrusive and easy to read.My main complaint was the vignette-like structure of the novel. Although a clever idea, I felt it was more like a collection of short stories than a novel. Each chapter focused on one character working for an English-language newspaper in Rome, while making only background appearances in the other chapters. I kept expecting the author to bring all the individual storylines together in a meaningful way, but I felt like it never really happened (although maybe I just never 'got' it!). I also found it very difficult to care for any of the characters. Only a few were likeable and after the first couple of chapters it was apparent that we would never get a second chapter with each 'main' character anyway, so there was little point in becoming invested. Overall, I would say that the book was well-written (which was mainly why I gave it 3 stars) and I would be likely to give Rachman's future work a read. However, the short story style and lack of emotion I felt towards any of the characters put me off, meaning that I struggled to finish the book in the end.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
clever but slight vignettes,
This review is from: The Imperfectionists (Hardcover)
This is a set of linked short stories, each featuring a journalist (or an accountant or reader) associated with a failing English language paper in Rome. It's light and it's clever, but I found it did not engage me. We are not clear how characters come to be in the relationships they suffer from and that break up, so it is hard to care what is going to happen. Many of the stories depend on a twist in the last few lines for impact - and I found it wasn't that rewarding to have read the 20 previous pages to arrive at the denoument of the chapter. So: think carefully before investing the time in this novel and think whether it is for you, would be my advice.
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Original, engrossing and funny,
By Lucy (London) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Imperfectionists (Hardcover)
I loved this book and was constantly surprised and fascinated by the stories and characters that it contained. There is a common link - the characters all work at an international newspaper - and their paths are expertly inter-woven. However, each character's world is so expertly drawn that each 'chapter' is the equivalent of a fabulous self-contained short story. I have never read anything quite like it. It is perfectly possible to read just a chapter/story/character and feel satisfied but I could not - I wanted to find out about the next person, his/her life and his/her story. The observation of the characters is so detailed, and depicted so accurately that it is impossible not to empathize with each of them - warts and all. The full range of human emotions and experiences are contained within the stories - love, loss, denial, jealousy, anger, frustration, fear and revenge. It is sometimes very funny and at other times very sad. This book is ideal for anyone who is interested in people and what makes them tick; it is great for those who don't want trash but can't face anything too highbrow at the end of a long day and it will move all who read it. Unforgettable.
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