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Which Brings Me to You: A Novel in Confessions by Steve Almond
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Which Brings Me to You

by Steve Almond

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158936,467 (3.17)7
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Algonquin Books (2006), Hardcover

Member:judithz
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:jz35, fiction, epistolary
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Predictable, unconvincing but nevertheless I really enjoyed it. Recommended to big romantics ! ( )
  vintage_vermin | Jul 12, 2009 |
From my librarytart blog: http://librarytart.wordpress.com/2008...

50-word description
Jane and John are single and jaded thirty-somethings. They lock eyes at a wedding and end up grappling and shedding clothes in a cloak room but John stops in an effort to change old habits. Instead, they agree to get to know each other by confessing their emotional and relationship histories through pen-and-paper correspondence.

150-word review
I loved the concept of this book in a Wow, I wish I’d thought of that idea way, commonly known as envy, I believe.

The book starts insightfully with the protagonists’ jaded attitudes towards love and their distracted attempt to have sex, however, awkwardness quickly infiltrates the pages. The premise of the pair confessing their emotional pasts with the freedom of being relative strangers becomes stifled, as if they are writing one-way news stories rather than searching for meaning or context within their own or the other’s life.

Two other flaws haunt the book: John’s decision to not have sex with Jane because he might like her rankles of a Madonna/whore mindset; and the plot’s movement is slow and lacks anchor points as if reading a diary with few dates or events to mark time.

Everything wraps up nicely and I was left wondering what could have been if some substantial sentences of wisdom had firmer structure and plot to support them.

Found in
Fiction A

Borrowed
Dec 08

Rating
Unrealised potential ( )
  mscrankypants | Dec 26, 2008 |
I liked this a ton, and think the collaboration worked wonderfully. The story opens on a failed wedding reception hookup between Jane and John. The two, who live in different states, decide to get to know one another through confessions they'll send back and forth through the mail. Except for the first and last chapters, the entire novel is made up of this correspondence. The premise sounds too cute, but the execution was really interesting and unexpected.

This book was devastating. That's overly dramatic, I know. But several passages, especially from Jane's letters, could have been ripped from my head, word for word. It's hard to see thoughts and feelings exactly like my own, laid bare on the page. The confessions are wonderful and terrible, and I believed in these two broken, sad people trying to make a connection. The final chapter let me down just a tiny bit, but don't let that stop you from trying this one out.
  haloolah | Jul 1, 2008 |
Too many of the situations were farfetched and unbelievable. Just not my kind of book. ( )
  CatieN | Jun 1, 2008 |
An interesting idea, but it never engaged me.

I much prefer Steve Almond's short story collection, "My Life In Heavy Metal"--review and excerpts here:
http://www.readforpleasure.com/2007/0... ( )
  readforpleasure | Nov 10, 2007 |
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Epigraph
Dedication
For the delectable Ms. Thang - a most arousing companion. - SA
For Betsy Mackenzie, 1964 - 2004. You couldn't have imagined how deeply you'd be missed. - JB
First words
I know my own kind.
Quotations
Last words
Disambiguation notice
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Wikipedia in English

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Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 156512443X, Hardcover)

Two rambunctious, romantic flameouts. One boring wedding. One heated embrace in a quiet coatroom. This is not exactly the recipe for true love. John and Jane’s lusty encounter at a friend’s wedding isn’t really the beginning of anything with any weight to it; even they know that. When they manage to pull back, it occurs to them that they might start this whole thing over properly. They might try getting to know one another first, through letters.

What follows is a series of traded confessions—of their messy histories, their past errors, their big loves, their flaws, and their passions. Each love affair, confessed as honestly as possible, reveals the ways in which Jane and John have grown and changed—or not changed—over the years; the people they’ve hurt, the ones still bruised. The ones who bruised them. Where all of this soul-baring will take them is the burning question behind every letter—a question that can only be answered when they meet again, finally, in the flesh.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)

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