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Cargando... The Unnamedpor Joshua Ferris
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I really enjoyed parts of this book - and I think I understand what he was trying to do towards the end, but it became tedious and boring in parts. I've found this with Joshua Ferris in the past though, he starts well and I'm hugely intrigued, but he takes too long to deliver and my brain stops being interested. That being said I thought all the characters were well written and interesting, it reminded me quite a lot of Joe Meno's The Great Unknown in style and content. Here's what I wrote in 2010 about this read: "Wow, who could imagine a life like that!? Comfortable couple copes with an life-altering condition that sends the man walking. The man becomes at war with himself, he and the marriage survives somehow. Very stimulating, different-to-read, hard-to-put down novel." Lived up to expectations. About a bigwig lawyer who suddenly gets the urge to walk, and when I say walk he walks for like hundreds of miles at a time non stop. Oh your kids graduating tonight, sorry i'm walking , I can't . It's that bad, it's tie him down at nighttime bad. Overall a great read, treat yourself. It was very well written and even moving in parts, but that couldn't distract me from the fact that it had little to no plot development. I felt like it was all a series of depressingly absurd incidents in a man's life that never led to a climax. I can handle depressing, but it's kind of cheating a reader to write a depressing novel that doesn't really go anywhere or impart any memorable message. Ferris' previous work, Then We Came to the End, is a much better and more dynamic novel.
Joshua Ferris’ 2007 debut Then We Came To The End fearlessly wielded the first-person plural to chronicle the fall of a Chicago advertising agency through its employees’ eyes. There is no “we” in The Unnamed, his superbly depressing follow-up about a marital crisis with no exit, but the descent is more personal, frightening, and ultimately meaningful. Though his idea might have worked equally well as a short story, Ferris paces his scenes and writes dialogue that sustains the tension, walking a line between realism and something more estranged, catching the invisible shifting energy in the room when words get spoken. DistincionesListas de sobresalientes
Tim Farnsworth is a handsome, healthy man, aging with the grace of a matinee idol. His wife Jane still loves him, and for all its quiet trials, their marriage is still stronger than most. Then one day he stands up and walks out. And keeps walking. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
Antiguo miembro de Primeros reseñadores de LibraryThingEl libro The Unnamed de Joshua Ferris estaba disponible desde LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Debates activosNingunoCubiertas populares
Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Here's the plot: Tim Farnsworth and his wife Jane are happily married, well off, etc. But they are dealing with a strange unnamed affliction. Tim has this problem where he just starts walking and he can't stop. He can't control where he's walking or how long he walks. He doesn't know when the walks will start or stop. He just get carried away by his legs and there's nothing he can do to stop it.
To me, this almost sounds like a funny premise. It has slapstick potential, right? But in my dear Josh's hands it is tragic. It adds stress to Tim and Jane's life the way that a terminal illness would, only Tim can't get the automatic sympathy a named illness would grant.
There is a really interesting look at the mind/body dichotomy in this book because Tim can't control his body and it's ruining his life. So he has a kind of psychotic break where he feels like he's two people: his mind that wants to stay put and his body that demands he walk.
Ultimately, it's Josh's writing that I love. The man has a gift for unpretentious, moving prose. This book is crushingly sad, but not in a way that made me angry or depressed. Instead I felt grateful that I don't have a disease, especially a strange unnamed walking one. ( )