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Mari, the Happy Wanderer's avatar

Well this was a fun and well-deserved takedown! I read The Goldfinch when it first came out--before all the hype--and I enjoyed it, although I thought The Little Friend was much better. But then it started showing up on everyone’s best-of lists and winning awards, and I was confused. To me the best parts of the book are Boris (terrific character) and Tartt’s depiction of addiction. But so much of it doesn’t hang together, especially, as you note, how Theo doesn’t return the painting. Call a lawyer, dude! He’ll help you return the painting without getting into trouble!

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Kathleen McCook's avatar

Agree with you on NY books. Went to school in Chicago and novels set there better. Bellow gets a lot of criticism these days but he's worth it.

I was on a jury when Goldfinch book came out and I had same reaction. Others loved it, but they weren't readers who knew the 19th c. novels. In the middle of the review you talk about Thomas Hardy and hard to remember he was among the people who created the novel. I'm with you on 19th c. I re-read most of the Russians during COVID and then realizing Dostoyevsky leaned on Dickens-- re-read many by him. Have to remember these were novels that were serials. And don't worry you --can read Zola forever. Or as I have maybe recommended before-- Anthony Powell's 12 v. Dance to the Music of Time.

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