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Hector Finds Time (2006)

di François Lelord

Serie: Hector (3)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiConversazioni
1878145,268 (3.36)Nessuno
The delightful third book in the multimillion-copy internationally bestselling series Being up against the clock was a real problem for so many people, thought Hector. What could he possibly do to help them? First he tackled happiness. Then he took on love. And now Hector, our endearing young French psychiatrist, confronts the persistent march of time. His patients lament that there is not enough time in the day. Or they feel that life is passing them by. And in one case, a young boy turns the problem on its head: He's impatient to grow up! Hector himself is increasingly aware of time: He doesn't feel quite so young anymore, and the clock is ticking on his relationship with his beloved Clara. So as time flies, so does our wise and winsome hero in his latest adventure, traveling around the world to understand the past, the future, and how best to enjoy the present.… (altro)
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nicht so gut wie das Buch über das Glück, von Brigitte geliehen
  Klookschieter | Aug 18, 2020 |
Bloggers and Goodreads reviewers regularly debate whether the star rating given to a book should reflect how much that reader actually enjoyed the book or, instead, how well the book accomplished what it set out to do, even though that particular reader did not enjoy it. I didn't really appreciate this distinction until I read Hector Finds Time, written by François Lelord and translated from the French by Carol Gilogley.

I did not enjoy this book, which felt to me like a more puerile version of Jostein Gaarder's Sophie's World , in that both books are philosophy texts disguised as novels. According to the review snippets at the beginning, Marie Claire described Hector Finds Time as "intelligently naïve"; I'm not so sure about the "intelligent" part, but I certainly agree with "naïve." Take this excerpt which appears on the third page of text, keeping in mind that Hector is supposed to be a psychiatrist:

"Over time, Hector had gradually changed the way he worked. At the beginning, he mainly tried to help people to change their outlook. Now, he still did that, of course, but he also helped people to change their lives, to find a new life that would suit them better. Because, to put it another way, if you're a cow, you'll never become a horse, even with a good psychiatrist. It's better to find a nice meadow where people need milk than to try to gallop round a racecourse. And, above all, it's best to avoid entering a bullring, because that's always a disaster.

Sabine would not have been happy being compared to a cow, even though cows are actually kind and gentle animals, Hector had always thought, and very good mothers too. It's true that she was also very clever, and sometimes this didn't make her happy, because, as you might already have noticed, sometimes happiness is not knowing everything."

Despite the feeling that Lelord was talking to me as if I were in kindergarten, I struggled on to the end, where I found Lelord's explanation as to why he created Hector and his adventures (Hector apparently has searched for happiness and love, in addition to time):

"I wanted to tackle psychological and philosophical themes in an entertaining way; to revive the French tradition of philosophical contes, or fables; [and] to both move and enrich my readers[.]"

Were I to rate Hector Finds Time on how well Lelord accomplished his first two stated goals, I would give it 4 stars, and if I had known from the start that it was supposed to be a philosophical "fable" (although I suppose the opening words "Once upon a time" probably should have alerted me), I might have enjoyed it more. As it was, though, I found Hector Finds Time amusing but, ironically, a waste of my time.

I received a free copy of Hector Finds Time through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. ( )
  BrandieC | Dec 14, 2015 |
Mich hat dieses Hörbuch unendlich genervt.
Zum einen die Person Hectors. Man mag es kaum glauben, dass der Autor selbst Psychiater ist. Der dargestellte Psychiater Hector hätte jedenfalls nicht mein Vertrauen. Ich finde ihn selbstgerecht, eitel, unangenehm und unsympathisch. Sein Verhalten gegenüber seiner Freundin ist fragwürdig, sein Fremdgehen wird zwar charmant als "Dummheiten" bezeichnet - aber es ist doch völlig daneben, dass ein erwachsener Mann, der sich zudem mit der Psyche von Menschen beschäftigt, ständig zusammennehmen muss, um nicht im Bett einer anderen Frau zu landen.
Überhaupt das Frauenbild des Buches... gruselig. Frauen werden immer zuerst über das Äußere definiert, dann kommt als nächstes schon der Kinderwunsch.
Zum anderen der Inhalt. Das Thema Zeit ist interessant und manche Aspekte sind auch wirklich bedenkenswert. Der Teil bei den Innuit und mit Abstrichen auch auf dem Kongress beinhalten gute Punkte. Insgesamt aber ist das Buch so zugeklatscht und die permanenten Zeitetüden erdrücken mehr, als dass sie zum Nachdenken animieren. Außerdem nervt dieser Sendung-mit-der-Maus-Stil. Man kann sich Christoph von der Maus richtig vorstellen, wie er sagt: "Das ist der Hector und der will heute mal herausfinden, wie das mit der Zeit so funktioniert". Grauenhaft, wie der kindliche Stil des Buches dahindümpelt.
Vielleicht hätte ich das Buch lesen und nicht hören sollen, denn als Vorleser ist mir August Zirner hier viel zu betont sanftmütig und irgenwie zu betont bewusst
Und schließlich die Rahmenhandlung. Da muss man kein Wort darüber verlieren. Lieber keine Handlung und ein Sachbuch draus machen, als so eine Handlungsfarce konstruieren.
Definitv kein Tipp. ( )
  Wassilissa | Nov 3, 2012 |
„Existiert die Zeit überhaupt, wenn das Vergangene vergangen ist, die Gegenwart augenblicklich Vergangenheit wird und das Zukünftige sich noch nicht ereignet hat?“

„Man braucht Zeit um zu sein, und gäbe es die Zeit nicht, hätte man also auch keine Zeit zum Sein. Sobald man da ist, gibt es also Zeit.“

Alles in allem eine entspannende Lektüre, zu der man auch Zeit braucht. :-)
  ahzim | Sep 11, 2011 |
Rather banal story. I read it for my book club in July. Parts of it made me think, but the tone (the voice) of the storyteller was so annoying that I couldn't like it. It was all written as if for a 5 year old with learning disabilities. And Hector's infidelity to his partner Clara was constantly referred to as little "stupidity". I hated that.
  verenka | Jun 13, 2010 |
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The delightful third book in the multimillion-copy internationally bestselling series Being up against the clock was a real problem for so many people, thought Hector. What could he possibly do to help them? First he tackled happiness. Then he took on love. And now Hector, our endearing young French psychiatrist, confronts the persistent march of time. His patients lament that there is not enough time in the day. Or they feel that life is passing them by. And in one case, a young boy turns the problem on its head: He's impatient to grow up! Hector himself is increasingly aware of time: He doesn't feel quite so young anymore, and the clock is ticking on his relationship with his beloved Clara. So as time flies, so does our wise and winsome hero in his latest adventure, traveling around the world to understand the past, the future, and how best to enjoy the present.

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