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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting family...interesting novel,
By
This review is from: The Privileges (Hardcover)
I'm giving "The Privileges" five stars because I was caught up in the dynamics within the Morey family - Adam and Cynthia and their two children, April and Jonas - and their relationships with the people and situations outside the family unit. Cynthia and Adam, both from solidly middle-class families, met in college and married upon graduation. They were, from the start, a single unit of two, which quickly expanded with the births of their two children to a unit of four. Both were estranged from their birth families, though Cynthia is reunited with her father on his death-bed. She had a "removed" relationship with her mother. Adam's parents died relatively early in the marriage and he was on "removed" terms with a younger brother, Conrad. Adam did phenomenally well in business in New York and Adam and Cynthia were quickly vaulted to the top-echelon on Wall Street earners - and spenders.What I found interesting about Jonathan Dee's portrayal of the Moreys and their children was he didn't take the easy way out and make Adam a typical Wall Street-shark, with no morals (though he did do some shady speculating) who cheated on his wife, finally replacing her with a series of "trophy-wives". He could have made Cynthia a typical NY society "social X-ray", whose only interest was in spending Adam's money as fast as she could on houses and clothes and art. Dee gives a nuanced look at Adam and Cynthia. They were NYC achievers who were, at the same time, devoted to each other and to their two children. Even though they spent large amounts of money on themselves, they also established a foundation to help the many disadvantaged in both America and abroad. The two children, particularly April, were more broadly drawn and seemed to disappear often into "heir-dom" with the attendant problems of drugs, promiscuity, and aimless living. I liked the book and while I didn't "like" all the characters - particularly Cynthia, at times - I was interested in what happened to them. I think you can't ask more than that with a novel.
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
disappointing,
This review is from: The Privileges (Paperback)
Like another reviewer, I read this after reading Frantzen's Freedom. I liked that book but felt this one fell away very badly. From a plot viewpoint the characters got into less likely or unbelievable situations- viz the son - or were not developed -like the daughter. There have been many novels about the rich being different but this was a profound disappointment- little to reflect on except the time wasted reading this book.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Wrong Turn...,
By
This review is from: The Privileges (Paperback)
This book came fêted with enthusiastic endorsements from the likes of Jonathan Franzen, Jay McInerney and The New York Times, the story of upwardly mobile Adam and Cynthia Morey taking on Manhattan and making it work for them. Interestingly, McInerney made the point in his review that the first chapter alone 'was worth the price of admission', all those wedding guests sweating it out in a Pennsylvanian heat wave. And he's right, that first chapter really is a great piece of work and persuaded me that I'd chanced upon a winner. The problem was that very gradually, after that marvellous start and some of the earlier set pieces, the story seemed to unravel. A hundred pages from the end, I began to suspect that Dee had lost his way - as I had - and fifty pages on I just knew I wasn't going to enjoy the ending - or quite understand what it was he was trying to say. And I didn't. It felt like a cop-out, as though Dee couldn't find the loose ends to tie up, and give his readers - this reader, at least - what they wanted. After such an encouraging and entertaining start his story just... took a wrong turn and ran out of steam. Having said all that, I'll give Dee the benefit of the doubt and count The Privileges a tiny glitch for a writer of obvious talent, a superior stylist and perceptive social observer who's probably going to make me eat my words with his next book.
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