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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Boy Detective Failsdi Joe Meno
Books Read in 2008 (162) Sto caricando le informazioni...
Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. 3.5 stars. File this under "wringer". The most striking feature of this book is the emotional plot arc, which sets up high without clear referent, drops farther and faster than is comfortable (bearable?) and struggles in the depths, occasionally looking up at the sky. There are moments of real beauty, if you can stand getting to them. I had wanted this book to be so much. But, even despite the decoder ring, this book failed to charm me - I missed the point entirely. So much so, I found myself wondering if I found a way to use the decoder ring on the entire novel whether I might unlock the secret novel inside - one which was actually engaging. This book is a cross between The Venture Brothers and Chuck Palahniuk. Billy Argo was once a Boy Detective, solving every mystery with the help of his little sister Caroline and hapless best friend Fenton. But while he's away at college, Caroline commits suicide. Billy is devastated, attempts suicide himself, and ends up in an institution for 10 years. He is eventually released to live in a half-way house with many of the villains and thugs he foiled as a child. The reason for his sister's death still haunts him, but he's distracted by invisible body parts, disappearing heads, and falling in love. The plot is crap. (SPOILERY from here on out.) Buildings disappear throughout--just vanish. No explanation. It's never important to anyone. It's just mentioned by the narrator periodically. A group of masked women sprays people with vanishing ink as revenge for falling in love. Snow falls from Billy's ceiling. There's a lake inexplicably full of completely non-decomposing bodies of young girls. No one seems curious as to how or why any of this happens. It just happens. The dialog wavers between pretty good and utterly unrealistic. This is Penny's explanation for why she steals pink things from other women: "It started after my husband died. He was a Naval officer, you see. He was away for weeks, sometimes months at a time. When he died, he was in another country. He was decapitated in an automobile accident, and another woman--some woman I never met--was in the passenger seat holding his hand when it happened. The woman, she also died. But, but he...he was with another woman, in his final seconds, seconds he should have been thinking of..."Penny looks away her tiny face reddened with shame. "Those moments were taken, stolen from me. I don't know why I started. Afterwards I began stealing shopping bags, purses, anything, from women I didn't know, women who were total strangers to me." Let us be honest with ourselves. No one talks like that. But even worse, the entire scenario is so pat and twee and UGH. It's like the worst indie movie in the world. The characters are the best part of this story, and kept me reading despite my increasing disdain for the "plot." Billy is a truly kind man, bewildered by the outside world and people's cruelty. Ellie Mumford's battle against scientific mediocrity, her physical clumsiness, her tortured relationship with her classmates, are excellent. Her brother Gus, who is also incredibly smart but who bullies his classmates and refuses to speak, is equally fantastic. Overall, I enjoyed this book despite the pretention and the annoying surreal moments. I don't buy the explanation for Caroline's suicide, I don't get the point behind 2/3rds of the book, and I don't buy that adventures are over when you're an adult. But in the end, it's mostly well written and has a great energy to it. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Menzioni
Fiction.
Literature.
Mystery.
HTML: In this "charming" and melancholic novel, a former child sleuth "investigates the hard-to-crack case of Lost Innocence" (Entertainment Weekly). 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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“The only thing all men have in common with one another is their inherent capacity to make mistakes. But there is wonder in the attempt, knowing we are all destined to fall short, but forgoing reason and fear time and time again so deliberately.”
This is my favorite book, but I haven't read it in six years. Not for any deliberate reason, just that it's words were imprinted on my heart and I haven't needed to revisit them in a while. But now I'm a little older, a little closer in age to Billy, and feeling just as directionless and beaten by a world that can be cruel for no reason as he did. This book hurts - but there's hope at the end. ( )