Rating:  Summary: It's No Laughing Matter Review: Author Stephen Carter, in real life a black professor at Yale law school, is a talented writer with a knack for drawing the reader in by adding interesting plot twists at critical points in his novel. I found intriguing the manner in which the author crafted a work of fiction from the kinds of headlines we all have seen. And, the perspective his main characters offer on what it feels like to be black in upper middle class America is thought provoking. The book is filled with rich portraits, but noticeably absent is any character with a sense of humor. Is the humorlessness intended to be a commentary on the black condition in America? Or is it a reflection of the legal community in general, and the legal academic community in particular? These questions were answered to me in the "Author's Note" at the end of the book. Carter says there, in effect, "You might read this book and think Yale law school is a horrible place, that today's law stuents are horrible people, and that our legal system is horribly flawed, but don't worry...this is a work of fiction". Frankly, I thought this was a cowardly way for a member of the legal establishment to try to avoid accountability for a work that makes an undeniable statement on the extent to which our legal institutions rob people of their humanity. I defy anyone to read the brilliant indictment of modern law students with which Carter opens Chapter 9 and to then accept at face value the closing apologia in which he says that he treasures and respects his students. Bottom line: I'm glad I read it.
Rating:  Summary: Yes, it's long, but . . . Review: And I so wished that I had a red pen to strike out words, lines, whole paragraphs. Then, why was I staying up until 3 in the morning? Two nights in a row? And why was I surprised at the end? I don't read thrillers much, it takes a lot to thrill me and easy violence is too easy. What made this book so interesting was that Talcott, the main character is just clueless at the beginning and has learned wisdom at the end. He is a worthy hero, because no one likes him, because he is a "wimp", because he has tried so hard to make everyone else in his family happy, because he tries so hard not to make any waves. Now the waves are coming at him and he has no skills, friends, or family to really help him. What does he do? It was quite interesting to find out and I'm glad I invested the many hours in this book. It kept me thinking. I just hope that Mr. Carter's editor next time takes a stronger hand and helps to separate the wheat from the chaff. Mr. Carter . . . a good editor helps make you a better writer. And I will read the next book you write.
Rating:  Summary: boring, boring, boring Review: a bad excuse for a 'recommended' book. too long, too coincidental, too boring. don't waste your money!
Rating:  Summary: The Emperor of Ocean Park Review: Claudia Bernard said it all---why have you deleted her review!? This monstrous book is insultingly padded with superfluous verbiage. It might have been slightly more interesting if the multi-monickered protagonist had actually succumbed to his recurring red haze of anger and killed his wife, rather than passive-aggressively risking sabotage of her career. I suspect judicious editing would have resulted in a poorly written short story, at most. Our book group concluded that "the Emporer has no clothes"!
Rating:  Summary: Byzantine Review: If you like byzantine mysteries this may be the book for you but as many have said here, it is way overlong and the plot is certainly incredible, meaning not credible. Carter writes well and his telling of the trials and tribulations of the Garland family is the strength of the book but in the end, it reads primarily as a thriller and as a representative of that genre, it is merely OK.
Rating:  Summary: What Was Stephen Carter Thinking? Review: How could a well-respected legal scholar embarrass himself like this? He not only uses this book to trash his colleagues, but reveals himself to be a fiction writer of little restraint, zero talent and no ability to communicate creatively the important themes he so obviously cares about. After penning this dreadful book you'd think he'd be too humiliated to show up at Yale ever again. I, for one, will never read his scholarly writings with the same respect with which I once afforded them. Not a gripping thriller (didn't anyone tell Carter that the constraints of the genre require an author to wrap up the loose ends at the finale?), nor a good literary novel (the fiction writer's mandate to "show, not tell" seems to have eluded him as well), nor an insightful piece of social commentary, this book attempts much and delivers NOTHING. Nor is it as ground-breaking in its portrayal of the black upper-middle class as the publisher's hype would have us believe. Both Barbara Neely in Blanche Among The Talented Tenth, and Dorothy West in The Wedding covered the same African-American-vacation-enclave-on-Martha's-Vineyard ground years before. This ponderous, silly book seems to be the unfortunate offspring of the union between an unbridled ego and a publishing industry that has lost sight of everything except producing blockbusters. The fact that The Emperor of Ocean Park has actually proven to be a commercial success is the only mystery related to this book that's worth pondering.
Rating:  Summary: I wanted to like this book! Review: I wanted to like this book, I really did. After reading the reader reviews here, I was even more determined. After all, the Today show was impressed enough to offer this up as the first selection in their book club; John Grisham was confident enough to endorse this author - how could I go wrong? As I read, I tried to ignore the other reviewers' almost unanimous appraisal that this thing was entirely too long. I love long novels. I get deep within the story and characters and hate to see the approach of the last page. Well, I hate to admit it, but they were right. This book needs another editing pass, big time. Mr. Carter repeats himself! I was amazed to find many of the same sentences, word for word scattered throughout the book. I am no editor, but I could have certainly pared this down to a far more manageable level in short order. The big mystery didn't seem anywhere near as earth shattering as promised by the 600-page build-up. Or maybe, by the time Professor Garland revealed all the details, I was just so sick of him that I didn't feel any impact at all. No wonder he didn't have any real friends to speak of. He was a total wimp. Kimmer (I hate that name) was equally distasteful. And what, pray tell did "Dare you" mean? Their son constantly says this but I never really did figure out what this meant. Still, I read the whole thing, didn't even skim through sections as other reviewers wrote they did. Mr. Carter writes well; it isn't his fault that he had a spineless editor - someone who should have insisted that tome be put on a serious diet. It would have worked so much better. The reader just gets tired reading it. I don't think that was the intention! I expect Mr. Carter will produce another novel and I will read that one too. I think he has talent and hope that he is not discouraged by the negative reviews. He just needs to learn a bit of "word economy". That's all.
Rating:  Summary: Great story, so-so mystery Review: A fascinating discovery for a European: there is a black upper class in America - in the book they are sometimes called "The Gold Coast". But they still feel marginalized, full of rage and suspicion, isolated within their professional communities. They distrust the liberals, but for historical reasons cannot trust the conservatives - or those among them who convert to the conservative cause. The father of the narrator - a Clarence-Thomas-like judge - did and was subsequently embroiled in a confirmation battle that destroyed his reputation and his family. His death means trouble for his son; a lot of people want to know about the "arrangements" of the dead judge. They are a riddle - a chess problem with a hidden message - and they mean trouble. As if the hero had not enough of that already: with his ambitious but unfaithful wife, at his university, with his family history and his life in general. The story is fascinating as a glimpse into life on the Gold Coast, but it rather fails as a mystery. The narrator cheats, because he discovers something, acts and then tells the reader two or three chapters later what and when he found out. Besides: the plot is either too arcane - the big conspiracy that involves them all: liberals and conservatives - or too obvious and sometimes facilitating between those extremes Still: this is a book to be recommended.
Rating:  Summary: Too Long For A Thriller Review: This booked steadily moved from five stars to two as the pages kept climbing. Why and editor didn't shake off some of the excess to get to the heart of the story is beyond me, but as it is I had a hard time staying interested after the first three hundred and fifty pages or so. The other problem I had with the book is I didn't find Carter's protagonist particularly likable.So for me I had a hard time connecting with the guy much less investing in his dilemma. Consequently by the time the novel climaxed in a cinematic stand off, there was little surprise or interest. Streamlined this could've been a taut page turning thriller. There were just too many pages to turn to get to the thrill.
Rating:  Summary: Intriguing Mystery with an anticlimactic ending Review: Despite the fact that Mr. Carter's narrative was a bit Dickensian (aka "wordy"), you will find yourself reading an intriguing story withfascinating social commentary if you have a certain "stick-to-it-ness". Just realize that the novel is intense and full concentration is needed in order to grasp the entire story line (not always an easy feat when you are the mother of two young children who are always competing for your attention, thus leaving me with even greater satisfaction in finishing this intelligent novel). Talcott Garland reminds me of Hamlet - a man of inaction who is called upon to avenge the death/alleged murder of his father, Judge Oliver Garland. Like Hamlet's father, Talcott was contacted by his father from beyond the grave. In this case, however a note had been left and The Judge never actually said anything about being murdered - just some clues about "the arrangements". The suspense is there until the very end ...unfortunately the ending was a bit of a let down with many loose ends left. I hope Mr. Carter's 2nd book is a sequel that ties together some of the loose ends- it would make me feel a lot better about the ending of the book!
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