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A review by lanaerae
Pull Yourself Together by Thomas Glavinic
5.0
NOTE TO SELF: You finally found that book you were looking for, the one that matches your movie tastes.
Not even kidding when I say this will more than likely be my favorite book of the year for the above mentioned reason. I keep asking people who I know read a lot if they know of books / authors in the style of movies like Wes Anderson movies, I Heart Huckabees, etc. (basically in a generic sense your run of the mill "Indie" flawed character driven kind of stories). The answer I always get is they know those movies and what I am looking for and while they cannot think of any books remotely close that feel, I'd surely like *insert an author here*. Well ha, this book proves those types of stories not only get told in book format, but get told just as well as they do in the movies.
Like those movies, this book won't be for everyone. It's the story of Charlie - overweight (something he dwells on but has no real interest in working on), no skills, no ideas about what wants from life beyond girls. We follow Charlie through his teens into early adulthood. There's sex, drugs, rock and roll. Friends and family. Death. Fame. From extremely dysfunctional to eh almost thinking things through in a sane adult mature kinda of way. From real to a pretenious jerk trying way too hard, We see all sides of Charlie.
The problem with a story like this is whether you're saying please, no don't let these people exist or yes, please where are these crazy people -- well some of their craziest and most tame moments both are a little too "It would never happen that way". So yes, even in a fictional story, that will put some people off. Still, as I said this kind of story is something I love, so I didn't mind at all.
Not even kidding when I say this will more than likely be my favorite book of the year for the above mentioned reason. I keep asking people who I know read a lot if they know of books / authors in the style of movies like Wes Anderson movies, I Heart Huckabees, etc. (basically in a generic sense your run of the mill "Indie" flawed character driven kind of stories). The answer I always get is they know those movies and what I am looking for and while they cannot think of any books remotely close that feel, I'd surely like *insert an author here*. Well ha, this book proves those types of stories not only get told in book format, but get told just as well as they do in the movies.
Like those movies, this book won't be for everyone. It's the story of Charlie - overweight (something he dwells on but has no real interest in working on), no skills, no ideas about what wants from life beyond girls. We follow Charlie through his teens into early adulthood. There's sex, drugs, rock and roll. Friends and family. Death. Fame. From extremely dysfunctional to eh almost thinking things through in a sane adult mature kinda of way. From real to a pretenious jerk trying way too hard, We see all sides of Charlie.
The problem with a story like this is whether you're saying please, no don't let these people exist or yes, please where are these crazy people -- well some of their craziest and most tame moments both are a little too "It would never happen that way". So yes, even in a fictional story, that will put some people off. Still, as I said this kind of story is something I love, so I didn't mind at all.