348 reviews for:

The Zahir

Paulo Coelho

3.3 AVERAGE

inspiring reflective slow-paced

Here is a review I wrote a long time ago, and it still holds true. Just finished reading this book again.
http://teandarkchocolate.blogspot.in/2011/11/first-time-i-read-this-book-was-in-2006.html
aglaia0001's profile picture

aglaia0001's review

3.0

This is an interesting take on love, obsession, and freedom. While reading this book, one must consider how these ideas necessarily intertwine. Beautifly written, at times the story seems secondary to the ideas in this novel. Characters are interesting not because they are unique or necessarily well-developed, but rather because they are "everyman" characters. Readers will relate to the feelings of confusion, desperation, obsession, and love as universal experiences. In some ways, the characters seem less important than the concept and the treatment of concepts. As with many of Coelho's novels, there is a definite strand of spirituality that weaves throughout the story--sometimes actually distracting from the story and the idea suggested in his subtitle. Still, Coelho's smooth and poetic writing style makes the novel worth the reading.

When you have nothing important to say/write it is better to keep it to yourself. Maybe it will leaven and bake something nice in the future. Or maybe not.

Grāmata viegli lasījās, bet brīžiem šķita pārāk garlaicīga. Tā visa iedziļināšanās Koelju zudušajā mīlestībā, piemēru došana un to izanalizēšana tiešām bija brīžiem grūti lasāma. Atsauksmes nebūs. 6/10.

Wow, I can't believe Paulo Coelho was able to write such a boring and unreadable book. I'm all for it for the books that want to convey some message, but come on, at least have some story alongside.


It was okay. The deeper meaning behind the story just didn't grasp me as much as I feel like it should. Perhaps it was the timing of reading it in my life, but I did not enjoy it. It was a long slow build up with a quick ending. The ending being very open to personal interpretation.

Lo leí porque me encanta a Borges pero no es un cuento nada parecido a Borges. Solo continué leyendo porque quería saber el fin del misterio. Me molestó el drama del protagonista y su personalidad tan egoísta. No recomiendo este libro para nada.

1 star. Self-congratulatory, conceited wankery. Only earns it's 1 as the prose was easy to read and well written for what it was. If you would like to read a book about how fantastic Coelho thinks he is, this is for you.

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By demand, my blog post on this book:
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I am just going to come out and say it.

[a:Paulo Coelho|566|Paulo Coelho|http://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1201840056p2/566.jpg] is a knob.

I dislike this man, his opinions and his writing. I have read [b:The Alchemist|865|The Alchemist|Paulo Coelho|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1287827991s/865.jpg|4835472] and the [b:The Fifth Mountain|4005|The Fifth Mountain|Paulo Coelho|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1268944841s/4005.jpg|19254211] in the past and have felt that they were completely over rated. Then a friend links all these "insightful" quotes from him all the time on Facebook. And then there is this article from earlier this month. But all of these were forgivable. Until I read this book. This book lead me to one conclusion.

Paulo Coelho is a complete wanker.

This book, The Zahir, is about an amazing author who is famous, incredibly successful with the ladies, intelligent, accomplished, and did I mention a brilliant writer? Maybe I need to tell you again how good a writer the author is. He is married, but has many girlfriends as he is incredibly attractive, and his wife who is a journalist goes missing. He mopes for a bit, while being a brilliant, amazing writer, but then gets an actress girlfriend. He then gets approached by a man who knows where his wife is, and he has to rediscover himself, by writing another ground-breaking book and some other stuff, before he can go find her. But the actress stays with him until he leaves, because he's great.

In case you forget how wonderful he is, he points out randomly how many languages (nearly all the languages in the world) he has been translated into. The books themselves, while wonderful, are not him or his ideas. 'Everything that's written in my books is part of my soul...' (p101). Yeah right. Get your hand off it.

Also he mentions the Zimbardo prison experiment at one stage, because he can. Why? No idea. It wasn't important or necessary. It was in fact completely out of place, not to mention wrong, and seemed to be mentioned to show off how intelligent he was.

My "favourite" part, was after he came home from spending all night out wandering Paris with the "Tribe" and then come home and didn't want to turn on the tv because they had "run out of things to talk about" so were covering a story of a rebellion in Haiti. So he goes on this whole rant about how is a rebellion important to him as a rich, incredibly successful author in Paris! Who cares! I just wanted to slap him the narrow minded prick! Urgh.

As well as all of this he seems incredibly unhinged as well. He screams at his girlfriend after being out all night with the Tribe, mentioned above, and she doesn't ask him where he was. So therefore as she is not jealous (not interested, jealous) he screams at her for not loving him any more. Besides the fact he has been moaning on about his wife who he loves who has left him for the whole book. I was beyond loving him at p5, no wonder the girlfriend seemed to have had enough by p200. But she hadn't really. She really thought he was great. You know why? Because this unnamed author is fucking fantastic, just ask him.

Why did I finish it? Because I wanted to find out what happened to his wife and girlfriend as I liked them (not worth it, it ended all about him), it was only 270pp, and it was orange (for a rainbow challenge). It gets 1.5 stars as it was well written for self-congratulatory masturbation. Actually, no. After writing this, 1.

Knob.

For more reviews visit http://rusalkii.blogspot.com.au/

mstoddart's review

4.0

Another wonderful book from Paulo Coelho. I thoroughly enjoyed this book - it was philosophical on one level and yet, still a love story.