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Open City
Open City | Teju Cole
'The past, if there is such a thing, is mostly empty space, great expanses of nothing, in which significant persons and events float. Nigeria was like that for me: mostly forgotten, except for those few things that I remembered with outsize intensity.'Along the streets of Manhattan, a young Nigerian doctor doing his residency wanders aimlessly. The walks meet a need for Julius: they are a release from the tightly regulated mental environment of work, and they give him the opportunity to process his relationships, his recent breakup with his girlfriend, his present, his past. Though he is navigating the busy parts of town, the impression of countless faces does nothing to assuage his feelings of isolation. But it is not only a physical landscape he covers; Julius crisscrosses social territory as well, encountering people from different cultures and classes who will provide insight on his journey-which takes him to Brussels, to the Nigeria of his youth, and into the most unrecognizable facets of his own soul. A haunting novel about national identity, race, liberty, loss, dislocation, and surrender, Teju Cole's Open City seethes with intelligence. Written in a clear, rhythmic voice that lingers, this book is a mature, profound work by an important new author who has much to say about our world.
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review
Robotswithpersonality
Open City | Teju Cole
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Panpan

No thank you.
I was barely tolerating a less than stimulating, somewhat standoffish protagonist for the sake of Cole's ability to turn a phrase, but then he decided to throw in a despicable act near the end, perhaps recognizing that his work was lacking a little spice, and then left it unacknowledged for the remainder of the text. I'm sure some literary glitterati view it as a 'stylistic choice' but I just found it underhanded and distasteful.

Robotswithpersonality 1/? Before that particular passage, here's what I was thinking:
Somewhat of a natural transition to go from Cole's collection of essays (Known and Strange Things) to this work of fiction, as the narrative feels like a series of interlinked vignettes, not quite a short story collection.
1y
Robotswithpersonality 2/? The main character tells snippets of his own life but also conveniently meets a number of people in his walks and other travels that seem to feel compelled to tell him their life stories in the span of a few pages, often in retrospect, not quite mournful, but war/conflict/violence/loss seems to be in the background of many stories.
Insights into personal histories, and how world history has shaped people.
1y
Robotswithpersonality 3/? Thought after the essay collection, that given his penchant for slipping into the poetic in the middle of non-fiction, any fiction novel would benefit from Cole's writing style, but it mirrors the essay collection in being heavy on the descriptive and ready at any moment to take on society's ills. These are not necessarily bad qualities, but they fail to gel into a compelling narrative. 1y
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Robotswithpersonality 4/? If you're looking for a slow quiet collection of moments of people discussing art, literature and social issues...[I might have suggested it before having gotten to the unnecessarily ugly twist]. 1y
Robotswithpersonality 5/? Cole introduces a side character called Farouq, and given the man's ideas and plans expressed (the frustration with Othering, and the need to see the different appreciated rather than assimilated, his translation studies and his work in the phone/internet boutique -seen as a microcosm of different kinds of people, from different places, religions, languages, all existing in harmony- a pacifist with sharp, even contentious, religious and political views), I would dearly love to have a novel from Farouq's perspective... [if I still believed I could trust this author not to pull dirty tricks out of nowhere]. 1y
Robotswithpersonality 6/? Narrator seems a teensy but elitist in his tastes and judgement of other's scholarship [but wait, he gets worse!]
Might have loved this more if it was framed up as journal entries in walks taken [turns out not enough of the story is framed that way to make it worthwhile].
1y
Robotswithpersonality 7/8 The disconnect the protagonist seems to feel towards strangers reaching out, contrasted occasionally with his interest in communicating with other strangers when they have a story he wants to hear, and his coolness in the early days and subsequent and retroactive woundedness about a recent ex moving on make a bit more sense if you take the view that the long game for this author was to make the main character unlikeable, but I've learned that the only thing I like less than a book focusing on an unlikeable character filled with attempted suspense and thrills, is a book that can't make up its mind on the likeableness of a character, and is more likely to deliver New York history trivia than any kind of revelations. Do NOT recommend. 1y
Robotswithpersonality 8/8 ⚠️SA, ableism, ableist and homophobic slurs, racism/xenophobia, recounting of hate crimes, discussion of planned end of life, discussion of bedbugs 😖 1y
batsy I read this a long time ago but I felt the same about the ending. Felt cheap and using sexual assault as a way to pull the rug out from under the reader left me angry. Especially if it was a way to look back on the character to "get" why he is that way. 1y
Robotswithpersonality @batsy Yes, Exactly! 1y
batsy @Robotswithpersonality I thought it was good at the time but I had to reread it and then felt disappointed (with myself, and with the book)... 1y
Robotswithpersonality @batsy Don't be too hard on yourself, the re-reader hindsight happens to us all 🤷🏼‍♂️ 1y
batsy @Robotswithpersonality Yes, that's true 🙂 1y
4 likes13 comments
review
Brooke_H
Open City | Teju Cole
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Bailedbailed

DNFing at 72pgs. Our main character walking around NYC thinking about his life is not doing it for me.

Megabooks I bailed on this too. 2y
Brooke_H @Megabooks I‘m glad I‘m not the only one! It won so many awards! 2y
23 likes2 comments
review
andrew61
Open City | Teju Cole
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Pickpick

Julius, a nigerian/German newly qualified Dr reflects on life by wandering the streets of NY + Brussels (holiday) encountering +sharing the lives of diverse individuals he meets including immigrant in holding prison ,cafe owner, post office clerk, + marathon runner. His reflections on culture as well as the stream of consciousness make for a slow read altho the penultimate chapter changed my thoughts on him with a dramatic reveal. V interesting

Anna40 I loved this one too 3y
40 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Susanita
Open City | Teju Cole
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This article (shared by Bookriot) came up in my Facebook memories feed from 2014. https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_5242399?ncid=tweetlnkushpmg00000031

At the time I hadn‘t read any of the books. Since then I‘ve read Open City and didn‘t especially care for it...

tournevis That's a strange mix of pretentious swill and experimental fiction. They are not the same thing. 6y
TheNerdyProfessor I haven't read a single one of these. Guess I'm not a hipster 🤷 6y
Libby1 I‘ve only tried A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius. It was a fairly quick Bail for me! 6y
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Leftcoastzen I‘ve read this one an all time favorite! 6y
Leftcoastzen And this one that I liked but not over the moon about it 6y
Leftcoastzen Lydia Davis is a rock star of the short story ,varies between the size of a sentence,a paragraph,a novella I read this one 6y
27 likes6 comments
blurb
JLaurenceCohen
Open City | Teju Cole

I wasn't crazy about Open City. It felt like a series of non-fiction essays forced into the mold of fiction. It's full of interesting observations about the world, but I found it hard to care about the protagonist.

3 likes1 stack add
review
marianese
Open City | Teju Cole
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Pickpick

The great flaneur novel of our era so far, brainy, introspective, and sometimes surprising.

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marianese
Open City | Teju Cole
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Loving the peripatetic braininess and subtle reflections of this novel. #currrentlyreading

Lindy I enjoyed this book also. Welcome to Litsy! 6y
marianese @Lindy Thanks! 6y
11 likes2 comments
review
Sharonbi
Open City | Teju Cole
Pickpick

Only halfway so far but pretty good. Very much a book written through the thoughts and musings of the main character; an African/German living in NYC of about 40 years of age.

RaimeyGallant Interesting. And welcome to Litsy! #LitsyWelcomeWagon Some of us put together Litsy tips to help new Littens navigate the site. It's the link in my bio on my page in case you need it. Or if you prefer how-to videos, @chelleo put some together at the link in her bio. 7y
Chelleo Welcome 🤗 7y
3 likes2 comments
quote
Lindy
Open City | Teju Cole
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“That is a tree of heaven,” he said. “Botanists call it an invasive species, but aren‘t we all?”

(Internet image: https://nature.mdc.mo.gov/discover-nature/field-guide/tree-heaven )

Lindy @rubyslippersreads Yes, it‘s the kind of tree that can grow through concrete. 7y
42 likes2 comments
review
Lindy
Open City | Teju Cole
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Pickpick

For most of this philosophical novel, I thought I was listening to a memoir (‘Julius‘ being plausible as Teju‘s original given name) and I wondered how Cole could remember all the details of long conversations that he had with strangers he encountered on his meandering walks. Then there was a revelation that made me go 😳 and check the book description. It makes sense as a novel. #Audiobook narration by Kevin Mambo pulled me through slow parts.

batsy This book was really something. I found how the revelation unspooled to be really chilling. 7y
Lindy @batsy Indeed. It was well done. 7y
49 likes2 comments
quote
Lindy
Open City | Teju Cole
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It is dangerous to live in a secure world.

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Lindy
Open City | Teju Cole
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To be alive, it seemed to me, as I stood there in all kinds of sorrow, was to be both original and reflection, and to be dead was to be split off, to be reflection alone.

32 likes1 stack add
quote
Lindy
Open City | Teju Cole
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We experience life as a continuity, and only after it falls away, after it becomes the past, do we see its discontinuities. The past, if there is such a thing, is mostly empty space, great expanses of nothing, in which significant persons and events float.

41 likes1 stack add
review
themodisher
Open City | Teju Cole
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Panpan

I really wanted to toss it outside after a point. Beautiful writing but the struggle to keep on reading was just unbearable.

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Imbookenit
Open City | Teju Cole
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Comforting and philosophical read. About a man pondering his childhood, culture and race. 4.5/5📖#fiction #tejucole #opencity

1 like1 stack add
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rockpools
Open City | Teju Cole
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Can anyone help @Lise ? I feel like I should be able to think of loads, but I'm stumped!

CAGirlReading @Lise Everything I think of seems to be missing at least one of the items but Self Portrait in Green might fit, also maybe Olio or Boy With Thorn for poetry... (edited) 8y
BarbaraTheBibliophage I think this recent release might fit the bill, @Lise. 8y
batsy Maybe this book by Kate Zambreno? Not so much geographical movement as a woman wandering around a city 8y
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Lise Ah, this is fantastic, thank you so much for sharing @RachelO ! Great suggestions, they all look very promising! Can't wait to start reading. Thank you @CAGirlReading , @BarbaraTheBibliophage , @batsy ! Wandering around the city is perfect 8y
rockpools @Lise Hope you find what you need. Your dissertation sounds fascinating! (And I might pinch some of these recommendations 😉) 8y
batsy @Lise You're welcome! And I just thought of another one that might fit 8y
batsy @Lise Also, in terms of film, if you haven't already seen this, it might be relevant: Cleo from 5 to 7. I agree with @RachelO, your dissertation sounds fascinating. Good luck ☺️

8y
BraveNewBooks @lise I feel like Homegoing is an obvious choice, so it's probably already on your radar, but seems to fit everything you're looking for! 8y
BraveNewBooks @batsy @lise Also the essay Walking While Black (available on Lit Hub) sounds very much tailor made for your thesis. 8y
Lise Thank you so much, I actually didn't have any of those on the list but they look perfect! @batsy 8y
Lise @BraveNewBooks Also perfect recommendations, had heard of Homegoing but without knowing was it was about! I've got 13 more items on the tbr list now, can't wait to get stuck in! 8y
batsy @BraveNewBooks I have that saved article in Pocket; thx for the reminder to read it! ☺️ 8y
25 likes12 comments
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Lise
Open City | Teju Cole
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Hi guys! I'm looking for books (but also poems/short stories/films) for my dissertation on movement through cities and emotion. Ideally with a bit of activism involved (focus on marginalised groups/written by non-white or non-male persons), but this isn't necessary. Focusing on the contemporary period, but earlier examples will be good too. Any ideas? Will be eternally grateful!

rockpools That's difficult! I feel like I should be able to list some, but can't quite... I'm guessing you already have 8y
rockpools Poems - I just read this, which is very much about changing Cardiff - but I'm not sure if it meets all yr criteria. Will repost 8y
rockpools & an older one. A while since I read - Pretty sure (but not 100%) that there was lots of walking 8y
Lise Oooh thank you so much @RachelO and @kendrastephaniekaryn !! Will check out asap! 8y
7 likes5 comments
blurb
batsy
Open City | Teju Cole
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A review on Goodreads describes this as a "plotless novel with a plot twist" and it really hinges on the #unreliablenarrator. This book gets a lot of mixed reviews but I found it quite chilling in depicting a straight male character's capacity for self-deception, even while being an intelligent, well-mannered, well-travelled aesthete. (Or maybe because of that.) #maybookflowers @RealLifeReading

saresmoore Your book reviews/synopses are smart and pithy every time! 👏 8y
batsy @saresmoore Thank you ☺️ Especially since I love reading your bookish thoughts 💚 8y
andrew61 An author who i keep meaning to read. 8y
24 likes2 stack adds3 comments
blurb
snacksinthestacks
Open City | Teju Cole
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Todays #booknlunch is Open City by Teju Cole. If you love to roam the city, you will love it!

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susanw
Open City | Teju Cole
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Who else is squinting at all these #Shelfie pictures trying to read all the book spines? #riotgrams

LeahBergen Me!! 8y
TrishB Always 😀 8y
OrangeMooseReads Me! 👋🏼 8y
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Suzze ✋️ It is impossible to look at a picture of a bookshelf here, in a magazine, on t.v., wherever without trying to catch the titles. 8y
Zelma 😆 yes, so true! 8y
Julsmarshall 🙋🏽me too! 8y
ErikasMindfulShelf Would be nice if you could zoom in!! 8y
CherylDeFranceschi Of course we are! 8y
93 likes1 stack add9 comments
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GregZimmerman
Open City | Teju Cole
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Teju Cole says smart things about marathoners. Real recognize real.

"...it is an act of extreme human endurance, still remarkable no matter how many people now do it."

Thanks, Teju Cole!

klwestenberg 👊 8y
15 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
gibbsne
Open City | Teju Cole
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Pickpick

"And so when I began to go on evening walks last fall, I found Morningside Heights an easy place from which to set out into the city." #firstlines #walking #history #urbanlife #debut #heritage #contemplation #psychology

10 likes3 stack adds
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Autolycus
Open City | Teju Cole
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QuintusMarcus Fantastic book! 8y
4 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Anna40
Open City | Teju Cole
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Pickpick

Wonderful book, beautifully written!

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susanw
Open City | Teju Cole
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So happy to find books of every colour! #bookrainbow #somethingforsept @RealLifeReading

britt_brooke Nice! 🌈 8y
PurpleyPumpkin Well done!🌈 8y
75 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
read.run.travel
Open City | Teju Cole
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Mehso-so

The descriptions of NYC were incredible & made me want to go back to my - sort of - second home immediately ?
Apart from that, I'm not sure I got much out of this read. Some chapters were interesting, others were exciting, & others in turn felt rather bland. All in all, I didn't really find a common thread. But that's okay, not every book can be outstanding.

PS: I'm back in beautiful Tübingen, reading by the Neckar river (with hot dog legs) ??

Notafraidofwords No no no (throwing a tantrum, I want every book to be outstanding). 😉 8y
read.run.travel @Notafraidofwords haha, I too wish that were the case 😛 8y
25 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
read.run.travel
Open City | Teju Cole
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I'm back from my vacation on Rügen and unfortunately read so much less than I had planned and hoped ? I did spend quality time with my sister though and I took lots of pictures (follow me on Instagram @ traveling_bibliophile ?), but I didn't read as much as I usually do on vacation.
I start my first job in nine days (holy cow, single digits!) and will hopefully get a few more books in before then! I just started reading Open City by Teju Cole ?

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Lola
Open City | Teju Cole
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Loaded Kindle, check. Reading material for when the airline doesn't get that airplane mode on the Kindle is ok, check. Pre-flight cocktail, check. #essentials

Lindy Safe travels! 8y
BookishFeminist Bon voyage! On my last several flights, Kindles were no longer banned for takeoff & landing so I hope that's true for you too! 8y
LitHousewife Have a great trip! 8y
Faibka Nice! 😎 happy travels! 8y
33 likes4 comments