The Rosie project

295 pages

English language

Published Jan. 6, 2014

ISBN:
978-1-4767-2909-1
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
880972467

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (44 reviews)

Don Tillman, a socially awkward genetics professor who has never been on a second date sets out to find the perfect wife, but instead finds Rosie Jarman, a fiercely independent barmaid who is on a quest to find her biological father.

31 editions

Review of 'The Rosie Project' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

"Oddly charming" is a great way to describe the narrator. I could not help but hear it in the voice of Doc Martin. But I loved seeing the world through his eyes, and how this story was unfolding.

I was a little disappointed with the ending -- not sure how I wanted it to end, but it was not as believable somehow as the rest of the book. Still it was a fun, insightful treatment and I thoroughly enjoyed it as a whole.

Review of 'The Rosie Project' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

What happens when a researcher with Aspergers sets out to use a scientific approach to find a mate? A lot of ridiculousness. The plot is far-fetched, but there's something fun about the silliness of how the protagonist operates that makes it an enjoyable beach read. I wouldn't buy a copy and loan it out, but if you're looking for something mindless to pass a flight, it'll do the trick.

Review of 'Rosie Project' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Don Tillman is a highly successful Professor of Genetics, but he is also a very socially awkward single man that believes the solution to all his problems is a wife. He embarks upon a search to find this wife; The Wife Project is a carefully designed questionnaire to find the perfect match for him. In comes Rosie, not a match, but Don finds himself helping her on search for her biological father.

Chick lit always seems to have a quirky woman looking for love, because apparently the message is that strong independent women are incomplete until they have a partner. That is probably a rant for another day but I have to wonder why Nick Hornsby and Graeme Simsion’s The Rosie Project does not fit into this genre? All the same characteristics are there, the only thing different is the role reversal. My wife jokingly calls the genre dick lit …

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Subjects

  • Marriage
  • Fiction
  • Genetics
  • College teachers
  • Research

Places

  • Australia