Rating:  Summary: Goodie Goodie Review: I just recently read HOW TO BE GOOD, my first venture into the world of Nick Hornby. It's one of those novels that compels you to turn the pages by making you wonder just how annoying its characters can possibly get.Very well written, though. It's a kind of Woody Allen-style high concept premise: the bitter, flippant husband in the piece goes for a back rub from a new age mystic, and magically gets all of the cynicism rubbed out of him--all of the humor, too. Overnight, he becomes so "good" you can't stand him. Nice use of irony. I like the line in it when the liberal, socially conscious wife is shocked to find herself saying "F--- the homeless!"
Rating:  Summary: SOOOOO Funny! Review: I love a book that is smart, well written, and laugh-out-loud funny. This is that book.
Rating:  Summary: Laughed Out Loud Review: It is quite a conundrum - how to be good? The maddening and infuriating feeling of being placed in the position of having to argue with your family on why you really don't want to 'be good.' Katie believes she is a good person. A doctor with a husband and two kids it is only when her husband decides to up the 'how to be good' requirements that she has to defend herself without destroying herself and her family. How can you explain that although you do not want your children to be spoiled bullies, you also don't want them to befriend smelly and annoying children with whom you will have to share a dinner table? Why, ideally, you should take in strays and care for the downtrodden, but what if you just want a little peace in your own home? Katie would like her kids to be nice, but she also thinks they ought to not have to befriend children just because their father said so. ". . . a life without hatred is no life at all, that my children should be allowed to despise whom they like. Now, there's a right worth fighting for." Hornby effectively recreates that vague resentment we all feel inside on having to defend our selfishness against our own ideals. He is able to make you laugh out loud at the perfection of his characters thoughts and feelings about a familiar internal struggle.
Rating:  Summary: Good book, disappointing ending Review: I can't knock this book too much - I couldn't put it down and flew through it in two days. However, all that time I was looking forward to a meaningful ending that would tie everything together and encapsulate the moral of the book. Unfortunately, it didn't happen. The ending just kind of tapered off, without much denouement. I look forward to reading Hornby's better-reviewed novels, because I liked the quirky writing style and insightful character studies. I hope they have better endings.
Rating:  Summary: Hornby Asks The Big Question Review: Hornby moves ever closer to "literature" with his third novel. It's not as funny as his earlier two, but it's easy and enjoyable to read. Hornby sets up a situation in which he can look straight at the issue of "being good" in a culture that doesn't seem to value more than an imitation of it. While the situation he creates, the transformation of an "Angry Man" into a "good person", is unlikely, the mayhem that ensues seems totally believable. Unfortunately, in an age where martyrdom is (hopefully) passe, Hornby leaves us with no guidance, beyond the sage advice to keep on learning, and keep on asking the big questions. It's a good book that takes on some deep issues in an enjoyably readable fashion. I hope Hornby has many more books in him!
Rating:  Summary: Sound familiar? Review: I think "How to Be Good" is a whitty and insightful story. Everyone can place themselves as some form of a character in the the book. How many times have you glorified your own actions and damned anothers? The characters are charming and colorful. I love Hornby's wit and comic subtleness. One of my top ten faves.
Rating:  Summary: Unfortunate overstretch by an otherwise competent author. Review: What a shame. Nick Hornby does so well when writing about subjects he knows about. Here, however, he tries to break the formula and write about something different - and it all goes horribly, horribly wrong. The story... well, just isn't a story, simply one idea stretched beyond breaking point. The characters are cartoon-like, and in the end it just doesn't work. Read anything else by this brilliant author, but avoid this stinker.
Rating:  Summary: From a Hornby virgin Review: Brilliant writing. This book pulled me in completely. Then, in the end, it dropped me. Humorous and insightful, but ultimately disappointing due, not to style, but content. On the other hand, if you take a Sartrian view of life, you just might love this book (assuming a sense of humor is not incompatible having a Sartrian view of life).
Rating:  Summary: Good, but not Hornby's best Review: I am a fan of Nick Horby's books. I had read 'High Fidelity' and 'About a Boy' before reading 'How to Be Good'. I had heard that it wasn't great, but I wanted to judge for myself since I enjoyed his other books so much. I liked this book, but it was a lot different than his previous works. I have to give him credit for tackling the task of writing from a female point of view. I found myself at times forgetting that I was reading something a man had written. If you're a Hornby fan and haven't read this yet, you should. Just don't expect it to be along the lines of his other books. For those of you that HAVE read it - did anyone else notice the reference to Dick from High Fidelity when he is describing characters in Janet's building? I thought that was clever.
Rating:  Summary: Some good parts but weak overall Review: I really enjoyed High Fidelity and About A Boy so I thought this would be just as good. Not so. Only read it if you are a completist, anybody else should pass.
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