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Loading... Personal Days: A Novelby Ed Park
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This book I am going to finish it because I started it. The disjointed absurd climate reminds me of how I see the world but the plot is not a real must read. I would recommend skipping this book. It is horrible. ( )I was on board with this book for the first two sections and probably would have given it 3 stars. The characters were quirky, and not unlike people I've worked with in cubicle-type jobs in the past. The plot could be funny, though perhaps a bit too cute for me to completely buy in. Then I got to the last sentence - which, by the way, is almost 50 pages long - and it all fell apart for me. About half way through that sentence I lost all interest and skimmed to the end. I'm pretty sure I didn't miss anything. If this is what life is like in the corporate world, I'm sure glad that I work in academia! As a fan of Office Space and The Office (both British and US), I picked up this book thinking it was going to be along the same lines, with smart, modern office humor. However, I had a difficult time with this book. This was not structured like your typical novel, and that bothered me. I found it difficult to read, and I slowly lost interest in the plot. The characters all seemed the same, with similar names, and no differentiating characteristics, so it was easy to lose track of who was who. When I got to the last section of the book, I nearly threw the book down in disgust. Written as one long run-on sentence email, it was very difficult to read. Who wants to read nearly 50 pages of text with lousy punctuation and no paragraph breaks? Maybe I didn't get what the author was trying to do, but the entire time I was reading this section, I couldn't stop thinking about how much I hated it. I liked this book better than 'Then We Came to the End'; partially because it was shorter. I also thought that Ed Park had a funnier take on the whole situation in his imaginary office environment. He didn't have the illustrations or the type fonts that 'Handle Time' has and it wasn't nearly as funny; but he did include a picture of a post-it note and tried to change up the type fonts a little for effect. I liked this book. If you’ve had the “pleasure” of reading Joshua Ferris’ novel Then We Came to the End you can probably skip Ed Park’s Personal Days. The two books are so similar in tone and plot (right down to each book having a character writing a story about the office they work in) that you would think there would have been a lawsuit at some point. Like Ferris’ novel, Park’s book also starts out in the first person plural point of view. The reader gets to know a group of office workers, “we”, who work for a failing company in New York City. As with a lot of companies that aren’t doing so well, there are layoffs and the air of impending doom pervades the place. We never know the company or the field they work in, making the distance between the readers and the characters that much greater. The problem with the first person plural point of view is that you never get close to any one character and therefore all the characters become some sort of amorphous blob. Park’s situation isn’t helped any by the fact that a majority of his characters have names that start with J — Jill, Jonah, Jenny, Jack . . . which makes it even harder to keep everyone straight. http://www.iwilldare.com/2008/09/20/p... 0.095 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0812978579, Paperback)In an unnamed New York-based company, the employees are getting restless as everything around them unravels. There’s Pru, the former grad student turned spreadsheet drone; Laars, the hysteric whose work anxiety stalks him in his tooth-grinding dreams; and Jack II, who distributes unwanted backrubs–aka “jackrubs”–to his co-workers.On a Sunday, one of them is called at home. And the Firings begin. Rich with Orwellian doublespeak, filled with sabotage and romance, this astonishing literary debut is at once a comic delight and a narrative tour de force. It’s a novel for anyone who has ever worked in an office and wondered: “Where does the time go? Where does the life go? And whose banana is in the fridge?” Praise for PERSONAL DAYS "Witty and appealing...Anyone who has ever groaned to hear 'impact' used as a verb will cheer as Park skewers the avatars of corporate speak, hellbent on debasing the language....Park has written what one of his characters calls 'a layoff narrative' for our times. As the economy continues its free fall, Park's book may serve as a handy guide for navigating unemployment and uncertainty. Does anyone who isn't a journalist think there can't be two books on the same subject at the same time? We need as many as we can get right now." —The New York Times Book Review "Never have the minutiae of office life been so lovingly cataloged and collated." —"Three First Novels that Just Might Last," —Time A "comic and creepy début...Park transforms the banal into the eerie, rendering ominous the familiar request "Does anyone want anything from the outside world?" —The New Yorker "The modern corporate office is to Ed Park's debut novel Personal Days what World War II was to Joseph Heller's Catch-22—a theater of absurdity and injustice so profound as to defy all reason....Park may be in line to fill the shoes left by Kurt Vonnegut and other satirists par excellence."—Samantha Dunn, Los Angeles Times "In Personal Days Ed Park has crafted a sometimes funny, sometimes heartbreaking, but always adroit novel about office life...Sharp and lovely language." —Newsweek "A warm and winning fiction debut." — Publishers Weekly "I laughed until they put me in a mental hospital. But Personal Days is so much more than satire. Underneath Park's masterly portrait of wasted workaday lives is a pulsating heart, and an odd, buoyant hope." — Gary Shteyngart, author of Absurdistan "The funniest book I've read about the way we work now." –William Poundstone, author of Fortune's Formula "Ed Park joins Andy Warhol and Don DeLillo as a master of the deadpan vernacular." —Helen DeWitt, author of The Last Samurai (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:22 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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