totally_screwed
Member
premise of the thread is self explanatory I hope. I used to share my short book reviews on a diff platform but I like the anonymity on here and also this gives me an incentive to keep reading and see the collection grow. I will warn that these may contain spoilers, that's about it cheers
#1
Title: The Unconsoled
Author: Kazuo Ishiguro
First published: 1995
Pages: 535
MY RATING: 7.5/10
- really bizarre
- it reads like a nightmare (time and space don't operate in the way that they should, things are constantly and frustratingly always out of the protagonist's control, all the characters are normal and batshit crazy at the same time)
- unpredictable
- ishiguro nailed the unreliable narration
- it felt like a pointless read because everything and nothing happened at the same time, I find this so crazy (in a good way). like the book opens with the protagonist (Ryder, a renowned pianist) having just landed in a city with plans to give a recital that week, but 500+ pages and a rollercoaster of interfering interconnected events later, the opportunity to give the recital just never presented itself despite his efforts to control his life even just a little bit and do the one thing he came to the city to do. poor guy genuinely needs therapy
- not his best work but still a great and unique read
next up:
I plan to read "A Pale View of Hills" by the same author after which I will have read all his books** taking a break from reading till saturday though
#1
Title: The Unconsoled
Author: Kazuo Ishiguro
First published: 1995
Pages: 535
MY RATING: 7.5/10
- really bizarre
- it reads like a nightmare (time and space don't operate in the way that they should, things are constantly and frustratingly always out of the protagonist's control, all the characters are normal and batshit crazy at the same time)
- unpredictable
- ishiguro nailed the unreliable narration
- it felt like a pointless read because everything and nothing happened at the same time, I find this so crazy (in a good way). like the book opens with the protagonist (Ryder, a renowned pianist) having just landed in a city with plans to give a recital that week, but 500+ pages and a rollercoaster of interfering interconnected events later, the opportunity to give the recital just never presented itself despite his efforts to control his life even just a little bit and do the one thing he came to the city to do. poor guy genuinely needs therapy
- not his best work but still a great and unique read
next up:
I plan to read "A Pale View of Hills" by the same author after which I will have read all his books** taking a break from reading till saturday though