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Loading... All He Ever Wanted: A Novelby Anita Shreve
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. usually I like shreve but this book was oft-putting. I just couldn't get into the characters. I doomed love affair between Nicholas Van Tassel and Etna Bliss, he older and obsessed, she still secretly in love with another. Sounds like Mills and Boon, but actually a really well written dissection of a marriage. Nicholas, who narrates the story during a Long train journey through the states to a sisters funeral, turns out to be a complex character and we see him warts and all. Poor, awkward story. It started out interestingly and went downhill. My least favorite Anita Shreve novel. I was disappointed in this book. It wasn't the best I have read by Anita Shreve. 0.051 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0316735736, Paperback)Anita Shreve's All He Ever Wanted reads like Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own told from the perspective of the husband. The wife gains a measure of freedom, but how does the repressive, abandoned husband feel about that freedom? Set in the early 1900s in the fictional New England college town of Thrupp, and narrated by the pompous Nicholas Van Tassel, All He Ever Wanted is at once an academic satire, a period novel, and a tale of suspense. Shreve's ability to nimbly hop through genres brings a liveliness to this story of love gone depressingly wrong. Van Tassel is an undistinguished professor of rhetoric at Thrupp College and a confirmed bachelor when he meets--in no less flamy a scenario than a hotel fire--the arresting Miss Etna Bliss. Immediately smitten, he woos and wins her. At least, he persuades her to become his wife. But Van Tassel hasn't really won her. Etna keeps her secrets and her feelings to herself. The extent of her withholding only becomes clear after a couple of kids and a decade or so of marriage. Then we find out that she's been creating a secret haven for herself all along. Van Tassel is in turn revealed--through his own priggish, puffed-up sentences--as something of a monster. The book is cleverly done; watching Etna through Van Tassel's eyes is like looking at beautiful bird from a hungry cat's point of view. But Van Tassel's voice might be too well written; he's pedantic and dull and snarky all at once, and by the end we find that we, like Etna, can't bear his company a minute longer. --Claire Dederer(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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