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Sto caricando le informazioni... First Light (originale 1987; edizione 1987)di Charles Baxter (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaFirst Light di Charles Baxter (1987)
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. An interesting novel. I decided to read it based on a recommendation from someone in an online book group. They said it was remarkably well written, especially in how he developed his characters. It was pretty good in that sense, but throughout most of the book I found the characters to be less than believable. They didn't mention the novel's central device, though, which is that it's written in reverse. It begins at the death of the main character (Hugh), and moves backwards in time, chapter by chapter, until he is a toddler at the birth of his sister (Dorsey). This is tied pretty closely with the Big Bang/Big Crunch theory of the universe (Dorsey is an astrophysicist), and in that sense it works quite well. That, actually, became the most interesting aspect of the novel for me. As I said, the characters themselves were often not that believable. But there was something compelling about them. Their relationships were interesting at times, and it was interesting to speculate on what would "happen next"—that is, on what had happened to bring them to this point. But I have such a bad memory that I ended up forgetting details I wanted to remember, which would probably have made it a much more interesting book for me. First Light was presented as a book showing the development of a brother/sister relationship. I was intrigued, as I have four older brothers. But the book was a disappointment, possibly because the brother was an impossibly dull used car salesman, and the sister a lofty, rather intellectual physicist, and neither of them was interesting in the least. I think that to be interested in a relationship, you have to like the people. Also, it started with today, then went backwards, pulling an event here and an event there, with no continuity, and it just didn't make any sense. Our book club decided that, if an author is going to craft a story in reverse chronology, the reader needs to be interested in the characters immediately, as they're not going to become more interesting as the book goes along. I thought Feast of Love was a wonderful story whose characters stayed with me for a long time. First Light I found in a wharehouse bookstore and it's meager price tag made me jump at the chance to read more by this author. This was a different kind of story, an almost experiment where a relationship is traced backward-- right to birth. As interesting as that was, all the common conventions of novel reading were throwned out the window. the relationship that we see at the start of the novel has to be concluded to be a result of the preceding chapters. --Like I said, interesting but now quite satisfying. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Hugh Welch has cared for his little sister Dorsey ever since they were children, when Dorsey looked at him as though he were a god. But when Dorsey returns to their small Michigan hometown with a successful career as an astrophysicist and a happy family life, Hugh, who has a long habit of worrying about his sister, realizes that it's his own life he has to cure, not Dorsey's. As they explore their complicated history over one hot Fourth of July weekend, they'll come to terms with the experiences that put such distance between them and discover the imperfect love that ties them as siblings. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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For me, the problem is that I don't deeply care about or feel close to any of the characters except young Noah:
passive inscrutable Laurie?
goofy self-centered pretentious Simon?
settling cheater Hugh?
compromising and unhappy Dorsey?
Dorsey and Hugh continue to be unredemptive judgmental of each other, which gets boring.
And, what's with all the 'feet on the dashboard'? this would be distracting & dangerous o any driver.
Not a great selection - also the book bows to being yet another modern (1987) novel blemished
by the now requisite (We Are Not Ourselves - 2014) indelible horrible animal death or cruelty.
It would be good if that would go the way of white clapboard houses...
I kept the book because it is so well written and love that Hugh creates with wood despite his odd diversions...
now time for a journey to a Little Library. ( )