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A 2025 International Booker Prize Shortlist Nominee A scathing, provocative novel about contemporary existence by a rising star in Italian literature. Anna and Tom, an expat couple, have fashioned a dream life for themselves in Berlin. They are young digital "creatives" exploring the excitements of the city, freelancers without too many constraints, who spend their free time cultivating house plants and their images online. At first, they reasonably deduce that they've turned their passion show more for aesthetics into a viable, even enviable career, but the years go by, and Anna and Tom grow bored. As their friends move back home or move on, so their own work and sex life-and the life of Berlin itself-begin to lose their luster. An attempt to put their politics into action fizzles in embarrassed self-doubt. Edging closer to forty, they try living as digital nomads only to discover that, wherever they go, "the brand of oat milk in their flat whites was the same." Perfection is a scathing novel about contemporary existence, a tale of two people gradually waking up to find themselves in various traps, wondering how it all came to be. Was it a lack of foresight, or were they just born too late? show less

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21 reviews
A remake of Perec‘s Les Choses updated from the 1960s to the 2010s, and following a couple of freelance web designers from southern Europe living in Berlin. Like Perec, Latronico opens with a detailed description of furnishings and treats Tom-and-Anna as a single undifferentiated character for most of the book, as well as nodding to a number of other key themes in the original, but of course he also digs into a lot of topics that are more specific to the lives of expat millennials in Berlin. It‘s interesting to see how closely the world of Parisian advertising and marketing people in the sixties maps onto the coders, designers and trendy restauranteurs of fifty years later: when it comes down to it and the expat community are trying show more to do their bit for Syrian refugees, Tom and Anna realise that not one of their friends has a skill that translates into real-world utility.

Latronico is bitterer than Perec, and gives his characters a harder time. Even when they have a stroke of luck that leaves them in a position to build a successful business at the end of the book without getting onto the rat-race, he makes sure we realise that he is leaving them hanging on the threshold of the pandemic. But there are a lot of very telling observations here: I felt that he got an enormous amount into a very small canvas.
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Oh boy, this novel is an update to Perec's 1965 debut, and its tone is simultaneously hilarious, repulsive, and fascinating. It is caustic and snarky, yet keeps an authorial distance from the zoo-like specimens he analyses. Honestly, it's almost entirely a book of "descriptions".
Descriptions you are going to recognize and think "fucking Instagram". At the same time, it serves as a go-to source for remembering the detritus of this era. The book is a zeitgeist describer; there is no meaningful story. They couldn't be more bland as protagonists go. Absolutely uninteresting and almost the last people you would want to read about...but that's what makes it weird to read a whole book about them. But it isn't really about them, but about us. show more People actually aspire to be as empty as these characters. Creating a lifestyle curated and managed to have peak appeal online. This is where we are at. These characters didn't grow at all. The novel has a lovely circularity in how Anna and Tom learn absolutely nothing.

Characters seeking authenticity while they refuse to break from an inauthentic world are not gonna turn out well. Far from them to realize that winning at the end is still, in the end, losing. But it's a losing some people would kill for...the banality of the modern aspirational couple. The one negative with this writing is that it feels highly artificial as you never get to enter their heads or know how they really feel...but there is still enough going on to recommend it. Oh, and it's short too.
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½
"Il futuro più rivoluzionario che erano in grado di figurarsi era la parità di genere nei consigli di amministrazione, le auto elettriche, il vegetarianismo".

Un calco di Le cose di Perec (1965) riconoscente e rispettoso, a volte un po' ingessato, ma scritto molto bene (aggettivo preferito: "friabile"). Un libro che riesce a essere istantanea di una generazione, forse di un'epoca. Si insiste sulle immagini, e forse lo scarto è proprio lì: dalle cose alle immagini, la vittoria dell'estetizzazione rassicurante dei social media che riempie le nostre vite.
Thought provoking and full of aimless disillusionment. This hits me personally due to my own status as an expat and numerous parallels I see here between text and life, making the reading experience at times painful, but the kind of painful like pressing on a bruise to make sure it still hurts in the way you have grown accustomed to.
This felt so close to my own life, or rather the life I came so close to living... While still at university studying Physics, I fell in love with HTML and CSS and spent a very pleasant winter break not studying quantum mechanics but instead delving into the similarly opaque nonsense of the box model, listening to Kid A while trying to get my page to look good both in Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator.

Eventually my career took me in another direction, but the outcome has been so similar to that described by Latronico in this beautiful short book. It is astonishing how much life he squeezes into these pages, all without a single line of dialogue. There is happiness here, but for every silver lining it feels as though the clouds show more are only getting bigger. show less
½
This is a very detached novella looking at the life of an Italian ex-pat/immigrant couple in Berlin. Its apparently a re-write of a 1960s Georges Perec story 'Things'.
Looking analytically at the outwardly perfect lifestyle of Anna and Tom we start to question whether they are really happy or have meaning in their lives. Its hard not to then think about your own life and how that measures up. I found this whole book quite confronting - they are essentially nice people doing the normal stuff of living, and yet it is clear thats not really enough! The detached tone works so well to highlight the ridiculousness of sharing memes and checking social media. And the gathering cloud at the end, oh boy.
½
Longlisted for the 2025 International Booker Prize, Perfection is, I suspect, the kind of book that will impact differently on readers of different ages. A blurber on the back of the book says to read it is to look in a mirror and truly see yourself and the culture you helped create. But readers of an older generation will read it in a kind of wonder at a lifestyle so fundamentally different from our own. For me, it was kind-of an adventure, the way I imagine being on one of those celebrity tours that show you how the rich and famous live. You know their lifestyle is unattainable, and you wouldn't want it anyway, but still, it can be interesting to see...

My tour guide is a narrator with an observant, analytical eye, His style is witty, show more occasionally acerbic, but never unkind or pompous. He knows his subjects better than they know themselves, and he also knows the world they live in better than they do. He knows that in a city like Berlin which surely represents change better than any other city on earth, change is inevitable even if Anna and Tom, smart though they are, live cluelessly on the periphery of it and are unprepared for it because they think 'change' is fashion. Though they've been to the hip cafés around Checkpoint Charlie, they know nothing of the city's history or its pivotal significance in the 20th century. They don't understand that the EU which facilitates flitting about in other countries in search of a congenial lifestyle, is a political construct, and even before Brexit was not as immutable as it seems. They have no awareness of the tectonic shifts in European demography or the backlash against it.

And though they are clued up about the latest trends in web designs, they have no clue about the impending AI that threatens their income and their lifestyle.

To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2025/03/12/perfection-2022-by-vincenzo-latronico-transl...
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Picture of author.
10+ Works 628 Members

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Hughes, Sophie (Translator)
Roberts, Sophie (Narrator)
Stubbs, Imogen (Cover designer)

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2022
Epigraph
"That was where real life was, the life they wanted to know, that they wanted to lead."
—Georges Perec, Things: A Story of the Sixties, tr. David Bellos
Dedication
For Alma
First words
Sunlight floods the room from the bay window, reflects off the wide, honey-colored floorboards, and casts an emerald glow over the perforate leaves of a monstera shaped like a cloud.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)It's just like it is in the pictures.
Blurbers
Oyler, Lauren; Davis, Kathryn
Original language*
Italienisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
853.92Literature & rhetoricItalian, Romanian & related literaturesItalian fiction1900-21st Century
LCC
PQ4912 .A87 .P4713Language and LiteratureFrench, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literaturesItalian literatureIndividual authors, 2001-
BISAC

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595
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Reviews
20
Rating
½ (3.66)
Languages
8 — Catalan, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
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Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
19
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8