A remarkably funny novel about an entirely unremarkable man.
A remarkably funny novel about an entirely unremarkable man.
Catching some extra reading time is a silver lining during my pump breaks. I'm having a struggle getting into this one but trudging along hoping to fall in like at least.
To Rise Again at a Decent Hour was just okay for me. I wasn't laughing out loud like other reviewers, perhaps it was the genre that didn't appeal to me. Nonetheless, I found the subject matter interesting, we live in a time where the social media drives our identity and the internet responsible for our thought process (Wikipedia is a credible source, really?). I'm sure this book I'm sure will strike a chord with many readers.
A disappointment this one. I felt bored by the story and the stupid jokes. I really don't understand why it made it to the Booker longlist. I read another book by Ferris, about an ad agency, which I loved (probably because I work at a design agency) so I know he can indeed be enjoyable and funny. Picture: Sailing in Greece
I love Joshua Ferris. He had me in tears of laughter with Then We Came To The End. This one was funny too, but also poignant about a dentist and his search for meaning. With some entertaining details about #teeth #JuneBookBugs day 22
This is the only book in recent memory that I #DNF. This book was so bad. I gave up about 120 pages in. Boring and went off on way too many tangents that made zero sense. #readjanuary
i didn't hate this, I just have other things I'd rather be reading. may get back to it someday.
This is one of my favorite quotes from this book. Haunting.