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The Hedonists [book] [9781591460176] |
$19.50 |
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| Displaying 1 to 1 (of 1 reviews) |
Result Pages: 1 |
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| by The Compulsive Reader (Michael LaRocca) |
Date Added: Tuesday 08 April, 2008 |
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A book that is much easier to read and enjoy than it is to describe. But, I shall do what I can...
James Cumes excels in creating characters who are real, vivid, alive. They are not characters. They are people. Throughout this novel, they often seemed more real to me than many whom I've actually met in my life. This book shines with subtle humor, unflinching honesty, and world travel and world-weary cynicism.
Randall Pascoe Maitland is an Australian diplomat who rollicks from a post in the heart of Europe, to Africa, to the United Nations in New York, to Mexico, across the Pacific in a transit of Venus, to a climactic riot of sex at a party in Mugga Way, at the heart of Australia'a national capital, Canberra. Most of the time he dwells, in a protocol sense, in the shadow of his Ambassador, Richard Makepeace - as Randall sees him, a Makepeace always on the make. Through Randall's eyes, the reader enjoys a behind-the-scenes look at what happens in diplomatic life, at the UN and elsewhere. The author knows of what he speaks, and I don't need to look at his bio to say that.
Randall is also a hedonist who, as the book opens, is enjoying an affair with a married woman. But, he's only a minor hedonist. Oh, he'd like to be a major hedonist, but he just doesn't have the innate charisma of Howard Winston Jocelyn the Third, the 38-year-old bachelor to whom many look as their champion. Never get involved, never make a commitment, just enjoy all the physical pleasures both overt and subtle that the opposite sex has to offer.
However, Howard has fallen from grace. He's fallen in love with the mysterious Anika. The story is told through Randall's eyes. Randall admits that Anika is beautiful, though not as beautiful as the numerous others who have graced Howard's bed. But mainly, Anika is a she-devil. Anyone who could bewitch Howard so thoroughly, and turn him monogamous without surrendering her virginity to him, must surely be a she-devil.
That may not sound like a new plot, but that's because there are no new plots. This isn't a book about plot anyway. It's about observation, about wit, about enjoying the beauty of the English language when it's employed by a master wordsmith. I believe the author could make a cereal box interesting reading, and he has far more to work with in this novel than a cereal box.
Are the characters sexist? Absolutely. The women as well as the men. Is the author sexist? Not at all. He's honest, as every writer should be. That is our job, folks. He's showing us life. Maybe the reader's life, maybe something the polar opposite, but it's real life.
The book may entertain you, thrill you, or offend you. Maybe all of the above, maybe all at the same time. But it will affect you. It will stir you. You will think about it after you read it. You will think about it while you read it. And, you will remember it.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!] |
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| Displaying 1 to 1 (of 1 reviews) |
Result Pages: 1 |
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