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Kane and Abel

Kane and Abel

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: What are you positive reviewers thinking!?!
Review: This might have been a good story, if the writing wasn't so bad in so many respects. Author Archer served as the youngest member of the House of Commons in England, and no doubt he got his start in writing through this position, rather than by his merits.
The book is an epic story covering the lives of two powerful men from the day in 1906 that they're both born on separate continents, up until they die in the 1960s. Their lives are parallel in some ways; in other ways, they are a study in contrast. William Kane is born into a life of luxury and power, the only son of one of the most powerful banking families in Boston's elite upper society. Wladek Kosciekicz, who later in life changes his name to Abel Rosnovski, starts his life as a foster son to a poor trapper's family in Poland.
Kane goes to Harvard and impresses everyone with his bearing and financial wiles at a young age. Abel discovers he is the son of a Baron, but the Baron dies and Abel is sent to a Russian prison camp after the Baron's castle is invaded by Germans.
Eventually, Kane works his way in as chair of a large banking firm, due in part to his father's name, but mostly because of his own hard work. Abel escapes the labor camp, makes his way to America, and works his way up from a job as a waiter to the owner of a large chain of hotels.
In the course of a financial dealing between the two, Abel grows to hate Kane, and starts a bitter feud that lasts the rest of their lives.
This could be an interesting book, and in some ways it is interesting. The rough young life of Abel is a fascinating story, as is the story of how Kane grows into his family inheritance. A rags to riches story set alongside a riches to more riches story is a good idea, and the backdrop of an emerging America and two World Wars is engaging.
But the book is rife with problems.
First, the poor editing of the book resulted in a rather high number of typos, ranging from wrong-word misspellings to the unintentional repetition of a phrase. This is a minor concern, but when the rest of the book is so shabby, the effect is magnified.
More important is the writing itself, which is filled with on-purposes, rather than mistakes, and that makes them all the worse.
The tone of the book is generally dreadful, and seems to be infected with the some of the same problems as the books of the day-I wonder if Archer, in researching this book, read so much early 20th century literature that his prose picked up the stiffness of a Sherlock Holmes story.
Certainly, he does far more telling than showing, and he does this in the worst way possible. There are so many instances in which dialogue is summed up rather than presented, in which grief and other emotions are spoken of rather than exemplified, and in which character dynamics are mentioned rather than displayed, that at some points the book reads like the bible.
Another problem is the pacing. The book moves through the years with a strange rhythm, sometimes dwelling on the most mundane of months for no apparent reason, and then whipping through Kane's experiences as a soldier on the front of World War 2.
The biggest problem, however, is the overall lack of theme. Archer presents striking parallels between the two men, describing some of their experiences with the very same language. The book is filled with the most bizarre coincidences, as Kane and Abel encounter each other, through random coincidence, three times without either knowing it. Then, their children meet each other and fall in love without knowing each other's identities. It's absurd. But, we can live with these types of coincidences if they serve a greater purpose, and that it the problem. In Irving's "A Prayer for Owen Meany," all of the strange coincidences are presented as the will of God. But here, God is barely mentioned, and there is no strong feeling that fate has brought these two men together for some strange purpose. There is no purpose to their meeting at all. Their hatred for each other is spawned through a misunderstanding on Abel's part, and his obsessive determination to take revenge on Kane is cartoonish and out of character. Again, we could understand if there were some reason the two men are drawn to each other, but Archer has given us nothing of that sort to go on.
The stilted writing wrings no emotion from the hearts of its readers, neither joy nor sorrow. When young Kane sees his best friend killed and his sister raped by soldiers, there is no sense of immediacy or grief. They say that the British have the best-developed sense of humor in the world, but all of the jokes fall flat (such as repeated "isn't-he-cute" descriptions of young William's precocious childhood.
Then there are the little things that just don't make sense. The aforementioned raping results in the victim dying, apparently raped to death without any explanation. A young Kane has been receiving tutoring lessons for months from his father the Baron, but never notices that the Baron has gone blind. A woman meets Kane on the train; he is a fugitive and has been told to tell no one his name. The dialogue is presented word for word, and then she uses his name. How did she know it? I thought it was an insidious plot point, but it turned out to be a dumb oversight.
I have begun to think that it is only a recent phenomenon that readers demand realism from their depiction of professions and realistic situations. This book would undoubtedly fall beneath that standard, as the details of the jobs that Kane and Abel occupy are shown in crude outlines.
Kane is a supposed genius at mathematics, winning the only Harvard scholarship offered in the subject, but then puts this knowledge to no apparent use. It is as if Archer thinks that the theoretical and highly involved mathematics involved with advanced Harvard studies are the most natural academic pursuit for a banker. That's ridiculous. It would be interesting to hear how he applies this knowledge in interesting ways to the practical matters of making finance decisions, but we never get that sense at all.
Meanwhile, in an astoundingly unrealistic scene, Abel makes a journey as a middle-aged man back to Poland, and discovers that his foster mother is still living a miserable existence in the shack in which he grew up. She appears at first to be senile, and doesn't understand that Abel is her foster son from so long ago. He tries to convince her for all of thirty seconds, and then resignedly hands her some money from his pocket and leaves (the omniscient reader sees her use the money for paper to start her fire).
My list of complaints goes on and on, but I will close with the ending of the book. After both men have become estranged from their children due to a marriage between them, they each plan a reunion centered on the fact that Abel's daughter and Kane's son are coming to the east coast. Kane dies moments before they arrive at his house. Abel has a successful reunion, and learns that Kane was actually his benefactor before dying himself. It all seems so purposeless, and the book ends with a grand unveiling of the name of the grandson of the two enemies, William Abel Kane.
Who cares?

* Note: After perusing the reviews on Amazon.com, I was surprised to find that Archer is still a successful author, and even more surprised to find that Kane and Abel received rave reviews from the other readers.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good to the very Middle!
Review: After hearing such rave reviews, I had to go out and pick this up and I must say I was thoroughly entertained and anxious to see how Kane and Abel would make out in the end. But, the more I read, the more I realized that I enjoyed the account of young Kane and Abel more than I did their adult lives.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: can't put it down
Review: An attractive bonus comes with these CDs - an interview with the author, Jeffrey Archer, famed British politician and, sorry to say, former prisoner. Although Archer was also a world class runner he couldn't out sprint the court where he was convicted for perjury in 2001. The Oxford educated patrician, former member of the House of Lords, was sent to jail on the Lincolnshire coast.

His personal and public life aside he remains a writer of considerable gifts as listeners are reminded with this stellar reading of "Kane & Abel." As mentioned it's a treat to hear the author interview, especially to hear Archer's upper class British voice. Happy to say that reader Jeff Harding doesn't suffer by comparison as he performs this compelling story of two brothers pitted against one another. It's a tribute to Harding's versatility as an actor that he succeeds in vocally inhabiting two distinctly different personas.

William Lowell Kane was born to privilege, the son of a Boston millionaire. Abel Rosnowski is an impoverished individual whose only bond with Kane is a shared birthday. Yet, each is ambitious and fighting to attain his goal no matter the cost.

Set during the turn of the century against a backdrop of a war torn world "Kane & Abel" is prime entertainment.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: very well written and very conservative
Review: First of all, I think this is a very well written book. One of the things that attracted me to this book was the idea of following the lives of two characters from different backgrounds. The author alternates nicely from Kane to Abel and stays consistent in describing each character and their friends and family throughout the book. It's very fascinating how he takes us from the day each child is born until the day each character dies. Kane and Abel grow to hate one another and then try to destroy each other. The fight between Kane and Abel starts when one of the characters seeks revenge. In the end, one character wins and the other loses.

Being that Jeffery Archer was a member of the conservative party in England, I think he wrote this book with an agenda in mind. I did not like how conservatively biased this book was particularly with one of the characters. Maybe about half way through this book, a keen observer will notice a conservative slant on things.

Whenever I read books like this, I like to ask myself what I've learned from it. This book is about two greedy men hungry for money and prestige. In reading about these two characters from birth to death and observing how the drama of their lives unfold, it makes me ponder on my own life and what my values are. People equate money with happiness because this is what society teaches us. If you need a lot of money to be happy or content, then you are not a happy person. Life is a constant struggle regardless of how much money you have. Clearly, one can see from the characters lives that their abundance of money did not make their lives hassle free. Quite the contrary was the case. The pivotal point in the book is when someone close to one of the main characters commits suicide. The reason why this person commits suicide has to do with money.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: can't put it down
Review: I couldn't put it down! A compelling, fascinating, well-crafted story. Lots of fun.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Initially interesting, but disappoints
Review: I had no initial expectations of the book. The great writing and plot in the first two-thirds of the book created high hopes that left me disappointed with the conclusion.

Kane and Abel's rise to success is emotional and interesting, with a series of shrewd business decisions that may please fans of The Apprentice. The characters are well-developed, and until this point they drive the plot.

However, as the book finishes, it appears as if the characters also realized they needed to wrap it up, and the pace changes quickly. A series of events, intenteded to be jarring but failing due to their predictable foreshadowing, left me unfulfilled. Another dissappointment was the portrayal of the rivalry, which was unnecessarily and impossibly fierce given the nature of the claimed offence. Without going into details, both characters overreacted to what was a standard business transaction, and clearly one without any intended malice. In fact, the characters sympathized with each other, but "deliberately" and frustratingly failed to find a common ground. I say deliberately because it seems the characters were forced into this rivalry in order to further the plot and satisfy the book's title.

This caused confusion for family members, and this reader. From this point on it seemed the characters changed their behavior to satisfy the plot, and certain cliched plot twists left me rolling my eyes.

I did enjoy the novel and it was a good companion on a long plane ride. I do not regret purchasing the book, hence the four stars, but the concluding chapters that are most fresh in my mind left me disappointed. On the bright side, it has shown a glimpse of how satisfying a good novel can be, inspiring me to seek out other gems of the past.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Story for the simple minds
Review: Jeffrey Archer, while he can write an engaging story, does not know enough about history. He lives in the past where he thinks in the colonial age where a small group of people shape the life of the world. This is obvious is the past of England where he grew up but not in the US now. While there still is a elite, its impact on the lives of the common man is diminishing. There is a strong middle class. He is still stuck on Harvard for everything. Well, some of the best Nobel prizes do not come from Harvard and Yale anymore. The US and the world is changing slowly. The privileges of the rich are not the only things that govern the world. There is more to the US than the Ivy league. I would strongly advice people to read authors like Coetzee, who won the Booker twice and the Nobel prize and who graduated from the University of Texas, which is belittled by the author in his sequel, the Prodigal Daughter, which shows how little he knows of the changes in the US. This book is a sham and will never be a classic whereas books like "Life and Times of Michael K" will have a lasting appeal. The reason is that any person can relate to the other book as it is about a simple person caught in the torment of the world and how he faces it. This book is about the elite who are disappearing and people will not able to relate to it in the future as it is about the unimportant past which appeals to a few. The author has not done enough research and he is one of the elite. I guess this is a way for him to relive his past and the frustration he feels about how fast it is disappearing. The present day world is one for those who live and work by their one merit and intelligence regardless of their birth. It is sad that the author does not grasp this and writes about people who can beat the stock market in their teens, predict the crash of 1929, make a million dollars before they graduate from college in 1920s (when a million dollars was worth a lot more than now). I am sure that even an economist like Milton Friedmann cannot predict such a crash. I realize it is a novel, but there has to be a hint of realism. I understand this a novel for the mass market, but people who lap this up must understand the harsh criticism and the total lack of realism that it is based on. The language style is also not special and will probably appeal to anyone who goes to high school. If one reads authors like Nadine Gordimer, a single statement in one of her novels like the Conservationist, "Not everyone is poor enough to afford greatness" would decimate this novel and the author's prose.


Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not exactly the next Steinbbeck
Review: On the same day, on opposite sides of the globe, two boys are born. William Kane is the son of a wealthy Boston banking conglomerate. "Abel" Rosnovski (who takes the name when he immigrates to the United States) is the orphaned child of a Polish peasant. William's life is shaped by wealth, political connections, and an Ivy League education. Abel's will is honed as he escapes Russian imprisonment and fights his way to the United States for a better life. When a banking deal goes awry between William's company and Abel's hotelier employer, Abel is left at the helm of one of the largest hotel chains in the country and face-to-face with his new arch-enemy, William Kane.

An appropriate book coming from an author many Brits describe as a ruthlessly meglomaniacal and corrupt politician. William's father is almost a caricature of selfish evil even while such selfishness is condoned by the book's absence of condemnation of it.

The writing itself is fairly prosaic. The shifts between William's point of view and Abel's is, at times, jarring. Though as we watch the men grow from boys and develop their respective strengths, it becomes eerily difficult to decide whom to root for in the upcoming battle that is pathetically transparent from the beginning.

Archer apparently aspired to be the next Steinbeck and while he fails, he didn't fail that badly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Explore The Human Condition
Review: One of the things that I love about reading a novel is that it is a chance to visit another community, or life, without actually going there.

"Kane & Able" is a story that captures the dramatic lives of 2 men who were born on the same day, in 1906, from 2 completely different socioeconomics.

William Kane was born into wealth. He was stubborn, haughty and all the "attributes" associated with someone who is born with a silver spoon in his mouth. Baron Able Rosnovski, an immigrant from Poland, was determined, creative and willing to do whatever it takes to never live the impoverished life that he was born into.

Both of these men eventually and repeatedly crossed paths, in business. And they desperately try to outwit one another, at a heavy expense to all around them.

As I read this book, I kept wanting to say, "Look in your heart," because each man was so busy trying to outdo the other that they loss sight of what matters, until the end.

Although this book has 477 pages, you will read it faster than a book that is one third its size, because Mr. Archer has developed the characters so well --- you will feel like you are looking at an IMAX movie.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Old Money - Verses New
Review: Penniless immigrant; or scion of an established family, the American dream is for the taking. Immigrant Abel had faced horrors in his past, but rose to fortune though hard work and seizing of opportunities. William Kane was born to money, but he took his small stakes, coupled with his intelligence, upbringing, and education, made it into a million before he graduated from college. Abel had to make his money well after that.

Part rags to riches, part Romeo and Juliet, all interesting, Kane and Abel document the birth, life, and death of two very different men who are both successes, but also end up destroying each other's greatest dream in a senseless feud born of ignorance.

The saga spans over 60 years, and constrasts Kane's easy life and born duty, with Abel's hard life, and struggle to forge his own destiny. However, the two men are very much more alike than different. Both are driven to win in their own way. In their own way, each lives out his destiny. They also each also destroy the other's ultimate dream in a battle of power and hatred. The irony is that battle never needed to be fought if they both had a little more information.

This also contrasts with another theme of the novel - what could they have achieved by working together as friends instead of enemies? Ulimately, it is not for them to decide, but for their children. Richard is his father's son; Flornentya her father's daughter. Does their love form a bond between their families - or an even greater rift with neither parent willing to admit they might have been wrong?




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