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The Post-Birthday World (2007)

di Lionel Shriver

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1,786609,561 (3.54)78
A tale told from the parallel perspectives of two possible timelines considers the life of American expatriate Irina McGovern, who in one reality stays faithful to her disciplined American intellectual partner, and in the other runs off with an exuberant British friend.
  1. 50
    La moglie dell'uomo che viaggiava nel tempo di Audrey Niffenegger (citygirl)
    citygirl: Each offers a love story from an unusual perspective.
  2. 20
    My Real Children di Jo Walton (amysisson)
    amysisson: In both of these books, a single moment and decision can take a life in two completely different directions.
  3. 20
    Vita dopo vita di Kate Atkinson (amysisson)
    amysisson: Both books examine decisions and moments that change the course of a life.
  4. 10
    Sliding Doors [1998 film] di Peter Howitt (infiniteletters)
  5. 00
    The Glass Hotel di Emily St. John Mandel (sparemethecensor)
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» Vedi le 78 citazioni

I just could not get into this book, therefore, I have stopped reading it.
  Cathie_Dyer | Feb 29, 2024 |
Ilenia, the main character of this novel is happy in her relationship until she is tempted by another man. Upon this temptation the novel follows two different alternatives. One where she gives into the new man and one where she remains faithful. Seemed to me to be a promising idea, but unfortunately Ilenia turns out to be one of those people for who the glass is half empty rather than half full. Both alternatives wind up being nothing more than her whining and complaining about the shortcomings of either man. Listening to a woman whose never happy and never pleased gets tiresome very fast ( )
  kevinkevbo | Jul 14, 2023 |
I wish I had never read this awful story. The characters are all awful people and yet they have stayed with me in the most unpleasant way. Their behavior is disgusting. The details offered for the protagonist's behavior are repetitive and boring. Her lovers are abusers and controlling. The snooker stuff was so tedious and exhausting. Don't know why I was compelled to keep reading. I usually have no trouble stopping if I don't dig a book. But I did like the format: the every other chapter of her different choices. My Real Children by Jo Walton does it so much better. And of course Life After Life by Kate Atkinson is the supreme novel of alternate lives. ( )
  Rebreitz | Feb 5, 2023 |
Irina y Lawrence son dos americanos que viven en Londres. El es un intelectual, ella que ha venido de Londres a la zaga de el, ilustra libros para niños.
  socogarv | Apr 2, 2021 |
There are "choose-your-own-adventure" books for children in which the story has different outcomes depending on the choices made while reading and being prompted to pick one decision or another. There are also similar books for adults -- a series called "Do-Over Novels" recently came through the library but when I tried one, the character ended up being run over by a taxi in India. This novel is a spin-off of that concept.

Irina McGovern is a Russian-American expat living in London with her long-time boyfriend, Lawrence. She is an illustrator of childrens' books, and he an intellectual working for Blue Sky Institute, a think-tank, where he studies and researches international relations. Lawrence, a fan of of the pool-like British sport snooker, is pleased to learn that one of Irina's collaborators, Jude, is married to Ramsey Acton, who is somewhat of a star in the snooker world. This acquaintance eventually becomes a sort of friendship, and the four of them have a standing appointment to meet for Ramsey's birthday each year. One year, Ramsey's birthday falls just after he and Jude have separated; with Lawrence out of town for work, Irina feels obligated to take Ramsey out to dinner, and meets him at a Japanese restaurant, where they proceed to get sloshed, and, after going to Ramsey's house, stoned. From here the story diverges: in one version of the post-birthday world, Irina falls hard for Ramsey, leaving Lawrence and abandoning herself to a tumultuous but passionate marriage. In the other, Irina resists temptation, growing in appreciation for Lawrence's steadfast niceness, admiring from afar the success of their friend-turned-acquaintance.

I will admit that it took me a while to warm up to this book. The alternating chapters made it a little confusing to follow the storyline in each world. And unlike the previous novel by Shriver that I had read, the characters did not immediately provoke any feelings in me, though as the novel progressed and the contrast between the two worlds increased, the poignancy of the smallest decisions became more evident, and I was drawn into the story. Though the events are obviously not identical in each world, they are mirrored and reflected in different ways to highlight the impact of Irina's decision on the lives of the three pivotal characters. I liked seeing the way that Irina's relationship with the two men played out in both worlds -- the personality traits and the characteristics of each becoming beloved and irritating in turns. But more than anything, the Frostian "road not taken" is something that haunts me personally, and to see it played out in a realistic, brutally honest, and consequence-laden story, and to know that there are no neat, happy endings -- this makes a great novel.

--------------------------------

Reread, 2018: When I first read this book, I had just been unceremoniously dumped by my first real "adult" partner; I'm now just completing my first year of marriage to a different partner. In the intervening years, I've come to conclude that while Lionel Shriver as a person is a problematic favorite, I deeply appreciate that she does not shy away from the brutal application of the unreliable narrator and the Picardian philosophy that it is possible to make all the right choices and still lose (though, from the safe distance outside the book's covers, it is easy to scream in frustration about the wrong decisions her characters make). This book is one of the few that reliably wrings me out and leaves me a little teary (though at different chapters, and for different reasons each time). ( )
  resoundingjoy | Jan 1, 2021 |
There's a sense of events playing out in neat, parallel tracks, as if predetermined - which you might want them to do, under certain circumstances. But a bit of chaos is much more fun, both in life and in fiction.
aggiunto da Nevov | modificaThe Guardian, Carrie O'Grady (May 12, 2007)
 
The writing is all over the place: cliched, pretentious and, when Shriver relies on using dialogue to explain - for the benefit of American readers? - the recent history of tournament snooker, tragically laboured [...]
aggiunto da Nevov | modificaThe Observer, Rachel Cooke (May 6, 2007)
 
In alternating chapters, Shriver allows her heroine both futures, and the result is a playful, psychologically acute, and luxuriously textured meditation on the nature of love.
aggiunto da DieFledermaus | modificaThe New Yorker (Apr 2, 2007)
 
It's a tantalizing endeavor that often includes a great deal of repetitive detail. In lesser hands, this technique would fail. But Shriver's adept, simultaneous narratives rarely stumble.
 
Shriver’s previous novel, “We Need to Talk About Kevin,” won Britain’s Orange Prize in 2005. That book — featuring a teenage boy who brings a crossbow to school and kills his classmates — was a riveting, carefully considered meditation on maternal ambivalence. But she seems to have rushed out this new book, churning through tired themes of infidelity and regret without offering fresh insight or even an entertaining story. “The Post-Birthday World” will only leave readers feeling snookered.
 

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What began as a coincidence had crystallized into tradition: on the sixth of July, they would have dinner with Ramsey Acton on his birthday.
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A tale told from the parallel perspectives of two possible timelines considers the life of American expatriate Irina McGovern, who in one reality stays faithful to her disciplined American intellectual partner, and in the other runs off with an exuberant British friend.

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