Reviews

Person by Sam Pink

carmiendo's review against another edition

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3.0

The cover of this book scares me a little.

bhirts's review against another edition

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5.0

Yo, this is it. This book kills it. Get this book. This book is fucking it.

glossgirl's review against another edition

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2.0

this did years of emotional damage on me

smalefowles's review against another edition

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4.0

This marks my first foray into "weird" fiction, but it just seems like postmodernism to me.

It's a strangely enjoyable book, consisting of what reads like the internal monologue of someone slightly more prone to alienated thoughts than most of us (YMMV). Perhaps it's just that he's living in Chicago in the winter. Chicago in the winter can do strange things to people.

There's a lulling refrain, which ties the text together and makes it seem a little weightier than a series of weird blog posts, and some metafictional touches.

embri8's review

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dark emotional fast-paced
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.75

senordustin's review against another edition

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4.0

Thin and depressing this one. Some really funny passages and some authentic alienation too.

saraklem's review against another edition

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4.0

The literary equivalent of a splatter of red paint on an otherwise blank canvas, but I liked it. It dredges up those thoughts we all have but don't talk about - not necessarily because they're perverse, but more so because they're plain strange.

hsienhsien27's review

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4.0

I've never read bizarro fiction but I have been dying to read this book or any of the Lazy Fascist books out of curiosity. I always seem to be interested in anything that seems to be different from the usual mainstream literature. My Kindle also decided to start working somewhat, so I borrowed this from the Kindle Library. I have one important question though, do authors get paid when you borrow it from the Kindle library? Like how when you borrow a book from a physical library the authors actually get paid when people read and borrow or whatever. Did that question make sense?

So anyway, this book is about a guy and his roommate living their lives. it's generally about these two guys. The whole novel pretty much has the narrator walking around thinking about random things about life, hanging out with his neighbor/girlfriend that he doesn't really know if he likes or not and his roommate seems to be fond of him. The roommate and the narrator's relationship is a lot like the relationship between brothers. Nothing really out there happens except maybe some creepy homeless people and odd dialogue. I like this book though, it was fun and short, it wasn't something to think critically about or interpret anything.

Most of this book is kind of random. There's no linear plot but that didn't really bother me. It's seem be a book about random person's thoughts. Maybe I'm wrong.

When I read the first few pages, for some odd reason I was reminded of The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger. The narrator is depressive, awkward, and seems to have a hard time connecting with the people that surround him. He hates everyone and then he loves everyone. He hates his life and then later he loves it. He constantly thinks about dying but continues to live anyway. With each suicidal thought, he thinks about how the people around would react, he wonders if they will ignore or feel sorry for him. He wants his existence to be known but at the same time he hates himself so much that he wishes to just melt away into nothing. He's seems to be either mentally broken, high 24/7, or just a really odd dude. He's oddly adorable though because he makes all these wacky observations that are so childlike that you can't help but feel bad for the thing. Some of these observances and thoughts that he has can either be really intelligent and deep or silly. Then I wonder about this book, am I supposed to feel bad for him or just laugh at him?

Rating: 4/5

http://wordsnotesandfiction.blogspot.com/2014/03/book-review-person-by-sam-pink.html

worm_variations's review against another edition

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5.0

How could I give this any less than five stars? It’s exactly what I wanted it to be and then some. It’s my first Sam Pink, despite maybe ten years of him skirting the edges of my TBR pile, and I’m looking forward to reading more from him.