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Chargement... The Irresistible Inheritance of Wilberforce: A Novel in Four Vintages (2008)par Paul Torday
Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. An interesting odd and strange book. But a fascinating book as well. It starts at the end and goes towards the beginning. Once you realise it you know there won't be a happy ending. You know the end already. This makes you curious about how it came to the end. My history with Paul Torday novels is that I first watched the Salmon Fishing in Yemen movie on our flight to Germany in 2012. Then just recently I saw the book as a recommendation in our library. I was slightly more excited about the book than I was about the movie. Which wasn't very excited at all. but it made me wonder about the writers next novels. Did he mature? Did he refine his writing? And yes, he did. The characters are much more drawn out, much more refined. The Irresistible Inheritance of Wilberforce drew me in. It also made me slightly depressed at some stages, especially at the beginning where everything is rather gloomy and you wonder where it will all end. Then you realise that this is the end and this made me somehow calmer and more relaxed. Somehow like a feeling I had the worst already done and dusted and we can move on now. abandoned after about 70 pages. I picked this up because I loved Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, but this is the story of an alcoholic, from the perspective of said alcoholic, who inherits a truly absurd quantity of high quality wine. Being a non-drinker, this didn't speak to me at all! And I found it deeply frustrating. That said, I suspect wine connoisseurs might find it quite funny. This is told in reverse, with episodes taking place in 2009, 2006, 2003 & 2002. The book hangs together by the repetition of phrases and descriptions from one episode to the next. in some instances you know what happens - having already heard what happens later. in other cases you discover more about an event that is glimpsed early in the book and described in more detail as the past events are relayed. Wilberforce is a somewhat unsympathetic character in some ways. He was adopted and didn't have a particularly pleasant childhood before starting a software company and working every hour available for the next 15 years. He has a somewhat obsessive personality and it is this that, to some extent, drives his behaviour throughout the book. At each timepoint you feel that he has the chance to turn his life around and not take the path that you know he does. In some why this makes the book a bit depressing; when he's promising to do something, you know in advance that he won't carry it through. the inheritance of the title isn't really an inheritance in the traditional sense, it's far more complicated than that. Don;t read on if you don;t want to know what happens That this book contains a somewhat unsympathetic character as its main protagonist, but still remains a book that was, overall, quite enjoyable demonstrates some writing skill. I listened to this on audiobook and the narration was very good. There was a lot of accent and pitch change present in conversations, so that they were easy to follow. There is an air of depression about the inevitability of knowing what will happen when each chapter ends on a hopeful note. the ending, is especially poignant in this regard. An object lesson to all who run to an obsessive nature...
This book will probably be described as a good summer read (especially for holidays in the south of France) but it is more than that, and I'm looking forward to hearing more from Paul Torday. The narrative style has none of the light comedy of Salmon Fishing with its parodies of civil service memos, emails and press reports. Torday's confidence in his story's power to command attention, despite beginning at its end, is not misplaced. I'll be impressed if Torday's second book is as big a bestseller as his first; it paints a much darker and more despairing view of life, filled with bitter asides about class and work. ...Torday's lightness of touch, in particular his ability to find humour in the darkest moments, without gratuitousness or cruelty, makes this an easier read than it should be. Appartient à la série éditorialeBvT (0630) Prix et récompenses
Chronicling the vintage years of Wilberforce's life, this is a haunting story of obsession and addiction, of loyalty and betrayal. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)823.92Literature English English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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A couple of years ago I read and enjoyed the author's novel 'Salmon Fishing in the Yemen' and on the strength of that decided to pick this offering up. This is much darker than the aforementioned book and lacks much of the humour.
This book centres around Wilberforce, a computer geek who runs his own multi-million-pound software business, working long days and spending the nights at home alone with a takeaway. Wilberforce was adopted as a child and has no idea whom his real parents are. Now in his 30s, he is successful, bored and without any real friends. On evening whilst out for a drive he stumbles upon a local wine shop where he is befriended the owner and a few of the latter's friends. Through the shop he finds everything that has been missing from his life: a father figure, a new interest, interesting friends and a woman to love.
The story is told in four sections, each featuring a different year, but a little confusingly is told in reverse, chronologically. The book begins with Wilberforce as a drunk wine nerd obsessed with the drink. His wife has died, his friends have deserted him and he is slowly losing his grip on reality. Thereafter the author tries to show his slide into this precarious state and ends the novel, with Wilberforce as a man, mixing with gentry and learning how to appreciate wine, on the brink of a new and exciting phase of his life. Telling the story back-to-front allows Torday to highlight Wilberforce's ultimate self-delusion, right up until his death he convinces himself that he is not an alcoholic.
There are certain similarities with this book and Salmon Fishing in the Yemen. Both feature a man sleepwalking through his own life, working obsessively at a job without really caring about it, before suddenly waking up and deciding to go and enjoy himself but ultimately ending in failure. There is even a cheeky familial link between the two books. This book features a character called Eck Cherwode-Talbot whilst SFinY features his cousin Harriet, who was an estate agent.
I must admit that I found it initially strange reading a book in reverse and it took me a little while to get used to it. As I have said previously this is quite a dark story but I still feel that it is worth giving it a go. It gives a rather interesting if depressing vision as how to seemingly normal lives can go irretrievably wrong and that anyone can slip into addiction. ( )