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Matthew Quick

Auteur de The Silver Linings Playbook

14 oeuvres 6,859 utilisateurs 410 critiques 3 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Matthew Quick graduated with a double-majored in English and secondary education from La Salle University in 1996. He taught literature and film at Haddonfield Memorial High School in New Jersey for several years, before leaving in 2004 to become a fiction writer. He received his Master of Fine afficher plus Arts in Creative Writing from Goddard College in 2007. He writes for young adults and adults. His young adult books include Sorta Like a Rock Star, Boy21, and Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock. His adult books include The Silver Linings Playbook, which was made into an Oscar-winning film, and The Good Luck of Right Now. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Comprend les noms: Matthew Quick

Crédit image: Matthew Quick, 1 July 2013, Author: Jeffrey Beall

Œuvres de Matthew Quick

The Silver Linings Playbook (2008) 2,696 exemplaires, 134 critiques
Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock (2013) 1,087 exemplaires, 86 critiques
The Good Luck of Right Now (2014) 725 exemplaires, 57 critiques
Boy21 (2012) 683 exemplaires, 30 critiques
Sorta Like a Rock Star (2010) 455 exemplaires, 35 critiques
Every Exquisite Thing (2016) 358 exemplaires, 20 critiques
We Are the Light (2022) 347 exemplaires, 15 critiques
Love May Fail: A Novel (2015) 307 exemplaires, 20 critiques
The Reason You're Alive: A Novel (2017) 195 exemplaires, 13 critiques
Boy21 2 exemplaires
Silver Linings 1 exemplaire

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Critiques

I don't know how I missed this book because I love Matthew Quick's books, but thank goodness I listened to it. It was so well done that I had to look to see if the author was a Vietnam vet. Since he's only 50, that's impossible but what an amazing writer. R.C. Bray, the excellent narrator became the main character, David Granger. David Granger is a Vietnam vet who undergoes brain surgery, which he blames on Agent Orange. He wakes up repeating the name of a Native American soldier that his family and friends have never heard of. This leads this American patriot on a journey to right a wrong that happened so long ago. I love reading books but I highly recommend listening to this on audio!… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Dianekeenoy | 12 autres critiques | Aug 18, 2024 |
Pat Peoples, um ex-professor de história na casa dos 30 anos, acaba de sair de uma instituição psiquiátrica. Convencido de que passou apenas alguns meses naquele “lugar ruim”, Pat não se lembra do que o fez ir para lá. O que sabe é que Nikki, sua esposa, quis que ficassem um "tempo separados".

Tentando recompor o quebra-cabeças de sua memória, agora repleta de lapsos, ele ainda precisa enfrentar uma realidade que não parece muito promissora. Com seu pai se recusando a falar com ele, sua esposa negando-se a aceitar revê-lo e seus amigos evitando comentar o que aconteceu antes de sua internação, Pat, agora um viciado em exercícios físicos, está determinado a reorganizar as coisas e reconquistar sua mulher, porque acredita em finais felizes e no lado bom da vida.

À medida que seu passado aos poucos ressurge em sua memória, Pat começa a entender que "é melhor ser gentil que ter razão" e faz dessa convicção sua meta. Tendo a seu lado o excêntrico (mas competente) psiquiatra Dr. Patel e Tiffany, a irmã viúva de seu melhor amigo, Pat descobrirá que nem todos os finais são felizes, mas que sempre vale a pena tentar mais uma vez.

Um livro comovente sobre um homem que acredita na felicidade, no amor e na esperança.

“Matthew Quick constrói tantas situações absurdas, permeadas por sentimentos tão verdadeiros, que é impossível não torcer por seu improvável herói.” People Magazine

“É difícil não se emocionar com o destino de um homem que, apesar das muitas provações, ainda tenta acreditar na esperança e na fidelidade, enquanto trava uma batalha para recuperar sua sanidade mental.” The Wall Street Journal

“Pat é adorável, e sua história de vida pouco convencional tem tudo para se tornar um best-seller.” Publishers Weekly
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
saladeleituraberna_ | 133 autres critiques | Jul 2, 2024 |
Bartholomew Neil passou todos os seus quase 40 anos morando com a mãe. Depois que ela fica doente e morre, ele não faz ideia de como viver sozinho. Wendy, sua conselheira de luto, diz que Bartholomew precisa abandonar o ninho e fazer amigos. Mas como um homem que ficou a vida toda ao lado da mãe, indo com ela à missa e à biblioteca, pode aprender a voar?O homem então descobre uma carta de Richard Gere na gaveta de calcinhas da mãe, e acredita ter encontrado uma pista de por que, afinal, em seus últimos dias a mãe o chamava de Richard... Só pode haver alguma conexão cósmica! Convencido de que Richard Gere vai ajudá-lo, Bartholomew começa essa nova vida sozinho escrevendo uma série de cartas altamente íntimas para o ator. De Jung a Dalai Lama, de filosofia a fé, de abdução alienígena a telepatia com gatos, da Igreja Católica aos mistérios femininos, tudo é explorado nessas cartas que não só expõem a alma de Bartholomew, como, acima de tudo, revelam sua tentativa dolorosamente sincera de se integrar à sociedade.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
qualqueroutrolivro | 56 autres critiques | May 19, 2024 |
We Are the Light by Matthew Quick

BIBLIOGRAPHIC DETAILS:
-PRINT: COPYRIGHT: November 1, 2022; ISBN: 978-1668005422; PUBLISHER: Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster; PAGES: 256; UNABRIDGED (Hardcover info from Amazon.com)
-DIGITAL: COPYRIGHT: July 20, 2021; PUBLISHER: Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster; PAGES: 251; UNABRIDGED
* (This version) AUDIO: COPYRIGHT: November 1, 2022; PUBLISHER: Books on Tape; DURATION: 6 hours (approx.); Unabridged; (info from Libby; LAPL)
Feature Film or tv: No

SERIES: No

MAIN CHARACTERS: (list not comprehensive)
Lucas Goodgame - Protagonist – high school counselor
Darcy Goodgame – Lucas’s wife
Karl Johnson – Jungian Analyst
Jill Dunn – Darcy’s best friend
Eli Hansen – Jacob’s brother
Jacob Hansen – Troubled youth who caused a tragedy
Mark – Co-owner with Tony of the local movie theater
Tony - Co-owner with Mark of the local movie theater
Sandra Coyle – A lawyer on the school board
Isaiah – Majestic high school principal
Phineas – Lucas’s Jungian therapist
Bobby – Cop

SUMMARY/ EVALUATION:
-SELECTED: I saw the print of this at a book sale and it intrigued me so I found the audio version on the library’s Libby app.
-ABOUT: A high school counselor writing to his former analyst who has given up his practice, relaying his experiences after a traumatic event experienced by Lucas and many in his community.
-LIKED: Epistolary format; That Lucas has metaphysical experiences that *could* be explained away, but the story teller doesn’t go so far as to do that, leaving us free to think that he either enveloped mundane experiences with his imagination, or they were real. That character names may have psychological or Biblical significance, but because not all names are, one could dismiss this as their own imagination. Examples: Lucas-derivative of Luke(?) Goodgame-because the character so needed his baseball coach father’s praise(?); Karl (the *Carl* Jungian analyst (?). And then that brings me to another analogy that I couldn’t be sure was intended; Lucas’s writing to his analyst who wasn’t responding, reminded me of the sense of unresponsiveness we sometimes feel to our persevering prayers.
-DISLIKED: Nothing. Good story, whether or not a read too much into it.
-OVERALL: I liked it, and can’t decide if recommending it to people with a depressive bent would be a good thing, or not so much, because maybe they would wallow in the tragedy of it all, rather than the author’s emphasis on healing.

AUTHOR:
Matthew Quick
From Wikipedia:
“Matthew Quick (born October 23, 1973) is an American writer of adult and young adult fiction. His 2008 debut novel, The Silver Linings Playbook, became a New York Times bestseller and was adapted as a 2012 movie of the same name starring Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence.[1][2]

Quick was a finalist for a 2009 PEN/Hemingway Award, and his work has been translated into several languages.[3] In 2012, his young-adult novel, Boy 21, was reviewed favorably by The New York Times.[4]

Quick was a finalist for the TIME 100 most influential people of 2013.[5]”

NARRATOR:
Luke Kirby
From Wikipedia
“Luke Farrell Kirby (born June 29, 1978) is an American-Canadian actor.[1] In 2019, he won a Primetime Emmy Award for his guest role as Lenny Bruce on the television series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”
Luke’s narration here is perfect! (So, I’m not going to wonder if his name, being the Biblical one that I’d wondered if the protagonist’s name was derived from, had any bearing on his being chosen for this narration).

LOCATION(S)
Majestic, PA

DATE(S):
N/A

GENRE
Fiction; Literature

SUBJECTS:
Tragedy; Psychiatry; Carl Jung; Romance; Loss; Community; Teens; Psychic healing; Psychosis

DEDICATION:
“For the wise and generous Jungian who finally got me to click my heels three times. Thank you.”

SAMPLE QUOTATION:
From “Chapter 3”
“Dear Karl,
Since you still haven’t written back, I’m thinking maybe I’ve told you too much too fast, and yet there’s so much I still haven’t said. I’ve been quite selective. But I forget that you are also still in mourning and have clearly—via the letter you sent terminating my analysis, as well as your silence—expressed your need for physical, mental, and emotional space. I worry that I’m overwhelming you, especially since I am no longer paying for your time.
I do have money.
The life insurance company accepted Darcy’s death certificate, which Jill sent them, and so they paid out on the small policy. And Isaiah arranged for me to be on paid leave, so I still have health insurance and a biweekly paycheck, which Jill keeps track of for me. I find it hard to believe it’s a matter of money, but I’d be willing to accept an increase regarding your hourly fee. You’ll eventually need an income again, right? I am happy to give you what money I have. Just name a price and I’ll have Jill write a check. Even if it’s just letters and no face-to-face meetings. A phone call down the line, to break the ice. And then who knows?
Darcy says I should keep sending these letters regardless of whether you write back. She says it’s the writing that helps me most and that no one is forcing you to read them. That my envelopes might sit on your kitchen table for weeks or months until one day psyche will command you to open and read. Then perhaps you’ll be moved to restart my analysis. And we won’t have to make up for all the lost time because we’ll have a handy detailed record of everything that’s been happening to me right here in black and white.
I have mixed shaky feelings lately.
Again, I don’t want to shame you, but the lack of a reply—especially after all the hard emotional work I’ve already stuffed into envelopes—has touched my father complex a bit and has me worried about my abandonment issues creeping back into my primary operating system. I’ve been trying to bring that to consciousness and be aware of it, like you always say. It’s like when Freud rejected Jung and then Jung had that breakdown where he slept with a loaded pistol next to his bed just in case he needed to exit the planet.
You’d want to be Jung and not Freud, I realize, so maybe that’s a bad analogy.
But regardless of all that, this is the last time I’m going to begin a letter with a hedge or an apology. It should be clear by now that I feel conflicted about writing you, even though I also feel one hundred percent compelled at the same time. “Karl needs you!” psyche continues to scream every day. “Don’t give up on him!” And so I will soldier on and try to win the battle for Karl. The best part of my soul loves the best part of your soul. I want you to know that statement is accurate and feel its truth as self-evident. “Like the sun rises and sets daily,” you used to say.
I remember you told me about Jung visiting a tribe of indigenous people and how they told him that they helped their father, the sun, cross the sky. They viewed it as their life purpose—helping their sun god make his journey each and every day. That’s how Jung learned humans actually affect and maybe even cocreate God. And that’s why we need to avoid serving our neuroses, because it separates us from the Self and therefore limits our ability to help God manifest in the here and now.
Maybe with these letters—even if you are only reading and I’m doing all the writing, for now—you and I can help our own metaphorical sun god cross his metaphorical sky.
Darcy says that my writing you is in service of separating my true inherent self from my neuroses, which can only improve everything both in consciousness as well as in the unconscious.
I remember when you used to tell me that my unconscious was always talking with your unconscious, both of which were in conversation with the collective unconscious and that all of this dialoguing was necessary and important and maybe even divine.
I realize that I don’t have to remind you of all of this, since you have been studying Jungian thought for your entire adult life and I’ve only been submersed in it for less than two years. But you told me to listen to my soul, saying, “Psyche always knows!” while shaking a finger over your head. I can still see the hopeful twinkle in your sky-blue eyes. It continues to give me strength.”

RATING:.
4.5

STARTED READING – FINISHED READING
8-17-2023 to 8-20-2023
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
TraSea | 14 autres critiques | Apr 29, 2024 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Membres
6,859
Popularité
#3,566
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
410
ISBN
232
Langues
16
Favoris
3

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