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About Schmidt: a Novel by Louis Begley
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About Schmidt: a Novel (original 1996; edition 1997)

by Louis Begley

Series: Schmidt Novels (1)

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452454,922 (3.07)16
The First Apostle This third collection is a feast for all the senses as rival brothers close in and ultimately select their first vintages to nominate as heaven-sent wines known amongst critical circles as the Twelve Apostles to the Drops of God. Visually detailing the finer points of real European labels allowing readers to not only read about these fine drinks but also potentially partake in them. The hunt is on! Shizuku and his adopted brother Issei have both selected their choices for the First Great Wine Apostle. Now they have to actually acquire these wines. Crossing the globe to meet with the winemakers and critics that know these casts inside and out. But will either one of these two know why Yutaka Kanzaki selected the winning wine? The message behind it may shatter the conscious of at least one challenger, for there is more to wine appreciation than just wine value. There are messages attached to these heaven sent wines. Shizuku's father selected them to help bring his family closer together through wine, even if it meant having to do so while he was no longer on this plane. The blood and wine will continue to flow, but who will appreciate it the most in the end?… (more)
Member:norderhoull
Title:About Schmidt: a Novel
Authors:Louis Begley
Info:Alfred A Knopf (1997), Hardcover, 273 pages
Collections:Your library, To read
Rating:
Tags:as yet unread

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About Schmidt by Louis Begley (1996)

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» See also 16 mentions

Showing 4 of 4
I thought the first half of the book was a poignant portrayal of an older man shocked by the death of his wife and pushed into early retirement by his law firm. The second half was a bit far fetched (in a relationship with a 20 year old) and a bit weird (running over an old homeless man who crapped on his doorstep). I'll read the follow up novel before passing final judgement on this tale (and novelist). ( )
  ghefferon | Apr 2, 2017 |
The setting here is very, one might say supremely, bourgeois. Albert Schmidt, newly widowed, recently retired from a cutthroat Manhattan law firm, is fully fitted out with all the appurtenances of great material success. The circles in which he moves are peopled by the very rich and often famous. Six months after his wife's death his daughter, Charlotte, announces her engagement to Jon Riker. Riker, a former mentee, is disliked by Schmidt for numerous reasons. One reason being that he's a Jew. More objectionable to Schmidt, however, is that Riker has knowingly undermined him at the firm where he no longer works. Schmidt has lost his beloved wife, Mary, and now he is losing his daughter to a grasping young man devoid of the romantic sensibilities that he most cherishes. Schmidt feels himself to be a radical truth teller, yet much of his "commentary" he must repress if he is not to alienate those around him. One wonders how he has done it. One wonders how he has managed to be successful. Interpersonal relationships are so key to the high-brow kind of law he once practiced, yet they also annoy him terribly. The answer of course is Mary. Often we hear Schmidt say something like "Mary would have managed it so well." And our sense is of his wife coming along behind him setting matters to rights. There are improbable sex scenes--two sixty-plus men with 20 year old girlfriends--yet somehow Begley carries them off. Certainly, the fact that both men are very rich makes the liaisons more plausible than they would be otherwise. I generally abhor all descriptions of coitus in print. Philip Roth's Sabbath's Theater is to my mind full of such repulsive writing. Begley's method however is defter and almost without vulgarity. I haven't quite figured out how he does it. I suppose one could say that Begley writes about territory already covered by John Updike and Philip Roth. Yet Begley's style is distinctive, nothing like the other two writers, and his milieu is far more genteel. I absolutely adore this novel. It's my favorite of all the Begley novels I've read so far, including Wartime Lies, which is saying a lot. ( )
  William345 | Jun 11, 2014 |
he writes about things worth reading and writing about, but i had trouble with his style. i was especially bothered by his extreme overuse of exclamation points, but the way he wrote in general got in the way for me. ( )
  overlycriticalelisa | Apr 2, 2013 |
Retirement and growing old are shown to be not as easy as they may seem, as Schmidt deals with the death of his wife, new relationships, isolation, thinking about the past, his own prejudices and the impending marriage of his daughter. This book didn't appeal to me at all at the beginning, but it grew on me towards the end. ( )
  Amzzz | Feb 15, 2008 |
Showing 4 of 4
Schmidt als amerikanischer Ekel-Albert oder als liebenswürdiger Opi, etwas trottelig, aber mit dem geballten Charme der Reife? Der Roman ist im Grunde nichts anderes als das konsequente Verschweigen einer Antwort auf eben diese Frage. Und also darf und muß der Leser selbst ehrgeizig seine Sympathiefähigkeiten erproben, mehr noch: er muß die Antwort geben, die Begley ihm gekonnt vorenthält, er muß sich seinen eigenen Schmidtie erfinden. So beweist Begley mit „Schmidt“ aufs neue, daß Konsum sehr wohl ein produktiver Akt sein kann, wenn es sich um den Konsum Begleyscher Literatur handelt.
 
Some of Western literature's most resonant works, including ''King Lear'' and Henry James's novel ''The Spoils of Poynton,'' concern the transfer of property from one generation to the next. The issues raised by inheritance -- the limits to love between parents and children, the fading but still formidable power of the parents, the almost inevitable ingratitude of the children as they pursue their own goals, the new alliances and potential betrayals involved in any marriage -- touch all of us, whether we have a kingdom or splendid British country house to pass on or only some precious, albeit worthless, family tchotchkes. In Louis Begley's fine new novel, ''About Schmidt,'' the property at issue is a house in the Hamptons, and although most readers might salivate at the prospect of owning such a house, inherited by Albert Schmidt from his wife's maiden aunt, his daughter -- wouldn't you know? -- would rather spend her weekends upstate, and her fiance worries about the upkeep. Schmidt is a buttoned-up, emotionally deprived man who has recently lost his wife, Mary, on whom he depended for his social life.
 

» Add other authors (3 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Louis Begleyprimary authorall editionscalculated
Guidall, GeorgeNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Krüger, ChristaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Gia che spendo i miei danari,
Io mi voglio divertir.
--Don Giovanni
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For P., A., and A.
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Schmidt's wife had not been dead more than six months when his only child, Charlotte, told him she had decided to get married.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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The First Apostle This third collection is a feast for all the senses as rival brothers close in and ultimately select their first vintages to nominate as heaven-sent wines known amongst critical circles as the Twelve Apostles to the Drops of God. Visually detailing the finer points of real European labels allowing readers to not only read about these fine drinks but also potentially partake in them. The hunt is on! Shizuku and his adopted brother Issei have both selected their choices for the First Great Wine Apostle. Now they have to actually acquire these wines. Crossing the globe to meet with the winemakers and critics that know these casts inside and out. But will either one of these two know why Yutaka Kanzaki selected the winning wine? The message behind it may shatter the conscious of at least one challenger, for there is more to wine appreciation than just wine value. There are messages attached to these heaven sent wines. Shizuku's father selected them to help bring his family closer together through wine, even if it meant having to do so while he was no longer on this plane. The blood and wine will continue to flow, but who will appreciate it the most in the end?

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