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Loading... The Guy Not Taken: Storiesby Jennifer Weiner
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I enjoyed this book, although I liked Good in Bed better. Quite high quality actually... The first I'd read of hers, having picked it up for $0.55 at a book sale. Really, it would've been worth full price. Good writing and sympathetic characters. the first couple of stories were really good but after that it went downhill. not her best read in my opinion. This diverse set of stories takes Weiner's readers beyond the single-girl in Philly formula and explores some deeper relationships. I like seeing a new side of her! 0.054 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0743298055, Paperback)Jennifer Weiner's talent shines like never before in this collection of short stories, following the tender, often hilarious, progress of love and relationships over the course of a lifetime.We meet Marlie Davidow, home alone with her new baby late one night, when she wanders onto her ex's online wedding registry and wonders what if she had wound up with the guy not taken. We find Jessica Norton listing her beloved river-view apartment in the hope of winning her broker's heart. And we follow an unlikely friendship between two very different new mothers, and the choices that bring them together -- and pull them apart. The Guy Not Taken demonstrates Weiner's amazing ability to create characters who "feel like they could be your best friend" (Janet Maslin) and to find hope and humor, longing and love in the hidden corners of our common experiences. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:03 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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I think, inexplicably, my favorite series of short stories were those which were the most clearly autobiographical - those of Josie, Nicki, Jon and their mother. Even while Nicki was whiny and sour, Jon was sullen and Josie seemed to have very little backbone of her own, always afraid of making a wrong step, I found the family endearing. Throughout the whole thing, it’s clear they care about each other, to some degree. They also seem to be very bad at showing it. I really liked reading the trilogy of short stories about them that were interspersed throughout.
My least favorite had to be the story of Dora getting robbed in a manner of speaking by Amber and Dawn, two girls from New Jersey. None of the characters jumped out at me as characters with whom I could identify or at least find endearing features. It seemed a poor ending to a series of short stories that did keep me reading. I think the novel would have best ended with the last of the three autobiographical stories, which seemed to have the most realistic and final of the endings.
On the whole, it was a nice novel. Not a great one, but a series of short stories cannot be expected to compete with a longer, more cohesive novel. (