Imagen del autor

R. M. Corbet

Autor de Shelf Life

4 Obras 91 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye el nombre: R. M. Corbet

Obras de R. M. Corbet

Shelf Life (2004) 43 copias
Fifteen Love (2002) 41 copias
The Passenger Seat (2000) 4 copias
The boy/friend (2010) 3 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Corbet, R. M.
Nombre legal
Corbet, Robert M.
Otros nombres
Corbet, Robert
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Australia
Biografía breve
As a teenager, Robert Corbet constantly fell in love with blonde girls called Michelle. At university, he always fell for clever girls with long velvet dresses and short, dark hair. Finally, he met a girl in pink overalls who rode a motorbike. After a long, agonising courtship, they bought a station wagon, had three children and were happy ever after. His other books with Allen & Unwin are Fifteen Love (Girlfriend Fiction #15), The Passenger Seat and Shelf Life.

Miembros

Reseñas

Written for younger teens, "Fifteen Love" was about falling in love for the first time. Mia and Will, who both struggled to understand the opposite sex, shared the narration, allowing the reader to gain an understanding of their emotions and confusion. While Will was a believable, vulnerable protagonist, Mia wasn't as likeable, nor as well developed as Will.

Although there were some rather humorous moments throughout the novel, there was no depth to the story. The plot was slow until the last third of the book, and I didn't really feel a spark between the two teens.… (más)
 
Denunciada
HeatherLINC | otra reseña | Mar 10, 2019 |
Robert Corbet's "Shelf Life" tells the disconnected stories of various characters who work for - or in - a grocery store. The story gravitates towards two in particular, Louisa and Adam, but others are given short vignettes that are little more than looks into their minds as everyday life happens around them.

It reminded me more of a movie, actually, particularly the type that were so popular during the 90s - the inane conversation in a boring, dead-end job was reminiscent of "Clerks". A common complaint I read in the reviews is that none of the characters are given closure, which in a way, I enjoyed. It gave it a sense of realism. Especially at a dead-end job one takes as a teenager, you get to know very little of your coworkers other than a few quirks. You might know that they live with their uncle, or that they deal drugs out the back (more common than you might think) during business hours, but know little else. And chances are, you never will. It's a slice of life piece, where each character is given a story for that day, not an arc.

As someone who worked her own dead-end job at a McDonald's in the middle of nowhere, I could relate to the customers who came in with outrageous demands, the managers who clearly did not care about anything beyond their next vacation, the weird coworkers and the ones you avoided and the ones you tolerated and the ones who were best friends in high school, and the casual insults people throw at you for working at a dead-end job. All of it rang true, to the point that I was laughing both at the stories, and my own experiences.

It wasn't especially moving, but as a slice of life, it was very well done, and I enjoyed its mundanity; this is not a novel that seeks to say something profound, or tell an epic story. It's the story of a bunch of people who work in a grocery store, with their own lives, their own problems, and their own dreams. And that is more than okay.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
kittyjay | otra reseña | Apr 23, 2015 |
Yr 7 - Yr 9
Mia thinks boys are immature. They only use one per cent of their brain. They only ever talk about cars and sport. They only ever think about sex. Will has no idea what girls talk about. He wishes he had a tape recorder...
 
Denunciada
mcgarry | otra reseña | Nov 27, 2007 |

Estadísticas

Obras
4
Miembros
91
Popularidad
#204,136
Valoración
3.0
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
13
Idiomas
1

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