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Patrick Melrose Novels (2012)

by Edward St. Aubyn(Favorite Author)
4.03 of 5 Votes: 5
ISBN
1447223527 (ISBN13: 9781447223528)
languge
English
genre
publisher
MacMillan
review 1: It's cynical literary fiction about wealthy British people in the last half of the 20th century—which I wouldn't normally enjoy, and in fact I didn't enjoy the first two books, but kept reading on the recommendation of a friend. And the third and fourth books were redemptive, perhaps partly because of the unrelenting unhappiness of the first two. Catharsis: When Patrick finally admits his child abuse, exhausted by hatred. When at the end of the third book he leaves the party and walks in his dress shoes over the snow toward a lake and sees swans launch, circle, and land again.In the first book Patrick is five, second book he's twenty, third book he's about thirty, fourth book he's maybe forty. Kind of like Richard Linklater movies.Very good prose style, maybe a little to... moreo finely crafted sometimes:"What could he do but accept the disturbing extent to which memory was fictional and hope that the fiction lay at the service of a truth less richly represented by the original facts?"That's well written, but a little too formal. I think I would like that sentence more in Jane Austen than in a modern writer. But I had a lot of page corners turned down anyway, and at other times the writing is nice and simple and effective:"They walked back and forth, pouring sea water into the sand until Thomas fell asleep in his mother's arms."
review 2: It's hard to critique books sometimes; it's so easy to be a reader, so hard to be an author. In this compilation of four novels, there were moments, even chapters, of such daring, such innovation, that they took my breath away. An entire chapter devoted to the mind of a drug user, as he goes on a bender, was absolutely amazing. The opening chapters, seen through the eyes of a small child, as he experiences his newborn little brother, almost brought me to my knees. And yet, chapters devoted to showing vain, insipid, shallow "toffee-nosed" Brits at a party seemed like the author shot himself in the foot--how do you portray insufferable characters without sounding insufferable yourself? I will keep this book (instead of donate it, which I usually do to books that don't completely captivate me), on the force of those splendid pieces of writing. They are like diamonds in a box of muffin mix. less
Reviews (see all)
Mattdiaz
Sigh, does one need to lead such a tortured life to write so brilliantly
chalet
The more respectable Mr Melrose got, the less I was interested in him.
Dominique
Not a huge fan. These books are kind of terrifying.
97_sarah
Grim, unresolved, excellent.
Bella
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