Less

a novel

[sound recording] :, 17 pages

English language

Published Oct. 29, 2018

ISBN:
978-1-5491-1870-8
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
1035386071

View on OpenLibrary

(66 reviews)

Arthur Less will almost fall in love in Paris, almost fall to his death in Berlin, barely escape a Saharan sandstorm, and encounter the last person on Earth he wants to face. Through it all, there is his first love. And there is his last.

17 editions

Review of 'Less' on 'Storygraph'

Arthur Less is a middle-aged gay mediocre novelist having a crisis as his recently ex-boyfriend has invited him to his wedding to marry someone else. 

Less' way of dealing with this situation is to accept every random literary invitation sitting on his desk to get him out of the country, on the run from his failure in love, rejected book and his impending 50th birthday.

Between Mexico, Germany, India and Japan, Less bumbles around confused and chaotically managing to fall through chances worst escapades and luckiest escapes. 

Review of 'Less' on 'Goodreads'

In the small, the writing is lovely. Arch observations and very funny scenes. But our main character manages to travel the entire world without living in it once.

It has to be purposeful, but every time Arthur has to deal with something emotionally difficult, it's at arm's length: a hard conversation with someone who is dying happens over Zoom. A hard conversation with someone Arthur wronged, just never really happens. Arthur never talks to his best friend/arch nemesis apart from a few sentences. Yes, he's literally running away from his problems (that's the premise), but surely over the course of the novel something has to break.

What would it be like to have to struggle to take care of a child? To take care of an elderly person? To stay committed to a single person for your whole life? To build a house with your own two hands? To revitalize …

Review of 'Less' on 'Goodreads'

From the description and the cover, I expected a funny beach read kind of story. I was wondering that something like that can win the Pulitzer Price, so I guess I should have known, it's not that easy.

Despite me hardly caring for contemporary novels, I still enjoyed Less reasonably well. I'm not too impressed though, since I found it all not engaging enough. That's a problem I have with most contemporary novels of that sort, so I guess the genre simply isn't for me. I still audioread the whole novel and as I said, for a genre I don't really read, I liked it well enough, so it's probably quite good if you like stories simply about people, without monsters or murders or magic in them.

Review of 'Less' on 'Goodreads'

It's difficult to put my feeling into words for this book, so I'll just try to keep it succinct.

I have a feeling Arthur Less was written to be a likable character, but I did not like him. As another character in the book put it so well (intentional, no doubt), ..."A white middle aged American man walking around with his white middle aged American sorrows? ...sorry to tell you this, it's a little hard to feel sorry for a guy like that."

Not to sound too "not like other gays" but I am confident that this book resonates deeply with gay men who are not me. The way partying, sleeping around with married men, and having painful relationships with insufferable writers is described, you'd think it was a universal experience, and I find the theme of "aging gay man coming to terms with being unlovable" to be a tired, …

Review of 'Less' on 'Goodreads'

3 1/2 stars. I really wish this site had more granular star ratings.

I'm not sure what to make of this novel. I got really enthusiastic during the first half. I found myself pulling quotes and admiring the prose style, which I didn't find astonishing so much as unique in its access to the protagonist's wisdom and I delighted in that. As the novel wore on, I delighted... less.

It became hard to escape the fact that Arthur Less is just a privileged white man feeling sorry for himself on an enviable world tour. Here's a thing about me: when I hear someone preface a purchase by saying a phrase along the lines of "It was more than I should have spent, but..." my little empathy sensors shut right down. Too expensive in my world means "no" because in my world money is actually finite and that defines my life …

Review of 'Less' on 'Goodreads'

The plot description for this novel mentions that Arthur Less will be traveling the world to avoid attending an awkward social event, but it is so much more than that. Along the way, the reader gets to know Arthur and his history: his foibles, his taste, his fears, and his loves. I adore the way this is written. I enjoyed the humor and the cultural and literary illusions. Arthur Less is mourning his youth, his love, and his mother while struggling to write his next novel.

This was at turns funny and sad, and kept me entranced. It kept getting better. I loved the ending.

There is a Liza Minnelli song I've loved since childhood called "Ring Them Bells" in which a woman travels around the world, and winds up meeting the guy who has been living next door to her, all along. I was reminded of that song at …

Review of 'Less' on 'Goodreads'

Many of the movies that have won Best Picture at the Academy Awards shouldn't have. Raging Bull and The Elephant Man were better than Ordinary People, which was good but didn't deserve the 1979 Best Picture nod. I loved and still defend the 1976 winner, Rocky, but if I'm honest with myself, All the President's Men and Taxi Driver were better. And the best (worst?) example: Oliver winning over 2001: A Space Odyssey in 1968. When was the last time you ever heard anyone talking about or referring to Oliver? That's right; 1969, after the award was given.
Despite mistakes like that, the movies that lost were worth seeing.
Andrew Sean Greer's Less won the Pulitzer Prize for 2018 and deservedly so. It's brilliant. Funny as hell and wise and a novel with a rare ending.
Here's a quick sample of Greer's writing that I landed on in a …

Review of 'Less' on 'Goodreads'

I'm still scratching my head trying to figure out what made this Pulitzer-worthy. The premise was fine. The execution was fine. The exploration of what it is to be an aging gay man was fine. It wasn't as comedic as the cover would lead you to believe. It wasn't as dramatic as its premise might suggest. I've enjoyed other books by Greer more. I guess he got the title right, because I was left wanting more from a book that won the Pulitzer.

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