Review of 'The Art of Racing in the Rain' on 'Goodreads'
2 stars
Skaitījās feel good, bet nu nebija. Īpaši man kā juristam: par daudz smagnēju tiesas procesu un netaisnības. Miršana un zaudējumi, un labas beigas tikai pateicoties labajai fejai; nope.
Review of 'The Art of Racing in the Rain' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
My 4-star review is not because this is an impressive literary work, but because, as a lifelong dog owner who lost my sweet old man earlier this year, it's an incredibly touching account of how sharing our lives with dogs is what makes us human. If you're not crying at the end, you have a heart of stone! I thought the fact that the story is told from the dog's perspective would be cloying, but the author pulls it off. A very enjoyable read.
Review of 'The Art of Racing in the Rain' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
Almost finished with this book and I have to say that I've enjoyed it much more than I thought I would. I received this book as a gift from a friend whose taste in books I trust, so I decided that even though this book is narrated by a dog, I would give it a fair shot.
The book ended up surprising me. At first I thought, "Okay... a book narrated by a dog? Really?" and I assumed that the narration was going to be boring and matter-of-fact type of writing (like Ready, Player One -- sigh), but then I started reading ... and reading ... and reading, and at times I actually TEARED UP because there are parts that really capture an outsider's view (the dog's) of a family in turmoil and stress.
I won't gush too much about it, but I highly recommend.
Review of 'The Art of Racing in the Rain' on 'Goodreads'
1 star
This is probably more unfair than most of my reviews, which are always more about my experience during the book or trying to look past that experience at the qualities on the page. So hard to get past that bias and be fair to, in this case, Garth Stein.
I found nothing to love in this book, but I had mostly decided to hate it based on its cover. "Dog on the cover" means that eliciting an emotional response is more important than telling a good story. The book will have more tragedy than comedy. There will be at least one scene that is actually a litmus test to determine if you're capable of emoting and worthy of human society. Failing that test means walling yourself off from the rest of the world reading "Old Yeller" and "Where the Red Fern Grows" until you're ready to safely interact with people …
This is probably more unfair than most of my reviews, which are always more about my experience during the book or trying to look past that experience at the qualities on the page. So hard to get past that bias and be fair to, in this case, Garth Stein.
I found nothing to love in this book, but I had mostly decided to hate it based on its cover. "Dog on the cover" means that eliciting an emotional response is more important than telling a good story. The book will have more tragedy than comedy. There will be at least one scene that is actually a litmus test to determine if you're capable of emoting and worthy of human society. Failing that test means walling yourself off from the rest of the world reading "Old Yeller" and "Where the Red Fern Grows" until you're ready to safely interact with people again.
This review is particular unfair of me when I consider my vehement dislike of 1Q84, which I dismissed because I felt the author set himself up as the reader's adversary from the outset. In this case, I saw the cover and determined that I would play the adversarial role - Stein would not break me, I would not let him win.
And he didn't win. He might have been able to win if I hadn't so accurately judged this book by its cover. There were no surprises at all. Each twist is telegraphed by several chapters and fell pretty much exactly as expected in exactly the place I knew it would. Same story packaged up in a different metaphor and racing doesn't stir anything in me, really.
So, while this is certainly my most cynical rating to date, this is a literary rule I will live by henceforth. No dogs on covers. Never.
Review of 'The Art of Racing in the Rain' on 'Goodreads'
1 star
Manipulative, with a philosophy narrated by a dog drawing live lessons from automobile racing. A bit of an odd one. I can see why it's so popular, but I don't think that I'll try to pass it off on real readers.