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To Rise Again at a Decent Hour

par Joshua Ferris

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
1,0587019,239 (3.07)91
After noticing his identity has been stolen and used to create various social media accounts, a man with a troubled past, Paul O'Rourke, begins to wonder if his virtual alter ego is actually a better version of himself. "Paul O'Rourke is a man made of contradictions: he loves the world, but doesn't know how to live in it. He's a Luddite addicted to his iPhone, a dentist with a nicotine habit, a rabid Red Sox fan devastated by their victories, and an atheist not quite willing to let go of God. Then someone begins to impersonate Paul online, and he watches in horror as a website, a Facebook page, and a Twitter account are created in his name. What begins as an outrageous violation of his privacy soon becomes something more soul-frightening: the possibility that the online "Paul" might be a better version of the real thing. As Paul's quest to learn why his identity has been stolen deepens, he is forced to confront his troubled past and his uncertain future in a life disturbingly split between the real and the virtual. At once laugh-out-loud funny about the absurdities of the modern world, and indelibly profound about the eternal questions of the meaning of life, love and truth, TO RISE AGAIN AT A DECENT HOUR is a deeply moving and constantly surprising tour de force" --… (plus d'informations)
  1. 10
    La Question finkler par Howard Jacobson (RidgewayGirl)
    RidgewayGirl: Both books have divorced, aimless protagonists who develop a fondness for Judaism as a way of finding family.
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» Voir aussi les 91 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 70 (suivant | tout afficher)
I started with great energy: I enjoyed reading about a somewhat cynical, dentist with a somewhat uninspired homelife, his work, his two ex-girlfriends. It was fun as well as occasionally thought-provoking. Then he finds that someone has produced a website for his practice, without his knowledge, and is using it to post snippets of Jewish history. When it became a tale of his increasing obsession with an obscure Jewish sect, I became less involved. I found the history a little tedious, and tended to skip through it. Yes, it was OK. But no more than that. ( )
  Margaret09 | Apr 15, 2024 |
An amusingly told story about a man searching for meaning in the modern world, whose main virtue I found in the amusement, and not so much in the searching for meaning. Which means, I suppose, that it crosses the finish line as a mild disappointment, though it wasn't a bad effort to watch.

Paul O'Rourke is a successful dentist but a struggling human. Ferris seems to pull off the trick of making him both narcissistic and self-deprecating, with often funny results. His life has been dominated by a search for some larger meaning to subsume himself into. As a committed atheist, God and religion are right out, but women and baseball are definitely in. He describes a few failed relationships in which he always felt he lost his own personality in the desperately needy merging of two into one, a process he names as being "cunt-gripped". It never worked out, of course, leaving him with his growing archive of Red Sox games to keep him company instead.

In comes the bizarre: someone creates an online persona in his name - a web site, a twitter account, Facebook page. The other "Paul O'Rourke" claims to be a member of an ancient remnant of the Amalekite people of the Bible called Ulms, who have paradoxically been commanded by God to doubt His existence. Paul and "Paul" communicate via email, first in confrontation, but Paul becomes more interested in this alleged group that claims him as a member.

Plot does not appear to be Ferris's strongest suit, but he's created an amusing character and placed him in an absurdist storyline. The problems include lack of plot focus, a character I didn't feel particularly invested in despite his amusements, and no real notable payoff to the story in the final stretch. It's an okay book, but not one that should really stick out in the memory.

( )
  lelandleslie | Feb 24, 2024 |
the first hundred or so pages of this is some of the funniest stuff I have ever read, but then storyline got too repetitive and I stopped caring. ( )
  Mcdede | Jul 19, 2023 |
Based on the toothpaste tube on the cover and the unfortunate similarity of the author's name to Tim Ferriss, I'd very unfairly assumed that this was going to be a lightweight and breezy set of musings on middle age, coerced into the structure of a novel. Probably a bunch of long-suffering wife stuff, a distant daughter, maybe some professional confrontation.

Anyway, not to spoil it, but the interruption to the protagonist's life was so strange and so exactly up my alley (having recently enjoyed the language sections of [b:Snow Crash|40651883|Snow Crash|Neal Stephenson|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1589842551l/40651883._SX50_.jpg|493634] in particular) that I was reeled in completely over the course of a few pivotal early pages. ( )
  NickEdkins | May 27, 2023 |
This book was billed as being a dark comedy. I couldn't find the humor in it at all. I kept reading, hoping it would get better, but it never did. I did not enjoy it, but I kept on reading. I don't know why. ( )
  Kimberlyhi | Apr 15, 2023 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 70 (suivant | tout afficher)
— and to watch as O’Rourke is slowly seduced out of his doubts about this group, whose sole philosophical flag is doubt, is one of the pleasures in a book filled with them.
ajouté par ozzer | modifierNew York Times, Lauren Groff (May 16, 2014)
 
The second thing to say is that this book is obscenely, inventively hilarious..... Reading this book in public places you in danger of being taken for drunk or mentally ill. ...For Ferris, the inability to take language for granted is what makes him one of the most dynamic writers of his generation.
 
And somehow, out of this deeply twisted comic novel, Ferris finds a stirring, deeply felt message about faith, though not necessarily a positive one...Of course, there's more to it than that, and there's more to this novel than can be described in one (or, frankly, many) reviews. Suffice it to say that To Rise Again at a Decent Hour isn't just one of the best novels of the year, it's one of the funniest, and most unexpectedly profound, works of fiction in a very long time. Something can never be anything, as O'Rourke notes, but Ferris' triumphant book is everything you could want from a novel of faith and its opposite — whatever that may be.
 
And whatever reservations you might have about the overall shape of the thing, or how its various set pieces are stitched together, you cannot deny that this is a genuinely funny book. Not funny in the wry-smirk way of so many “comic” novels. Actually funny. ...What follows is a comic theological thriller in the vein of Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policemen’s Union...Part of the problem is reconciling the gags with the gravitas. That Ferris makes it work so often is the mark of his considerable talent; that he sometimes fails is the mark of his ambition for his writing.
 
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The mouth is a weird place. Not quite inside and not quite out, not skin and not organ, something in between: dark, wet, admitting access to an interior most people would rather not contemplate - where cancer stars, where the heart is broken, where the soul might just fail to turn up. -Chapter 1
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After noticing his identity has been stolen and used to create various social media accounts, a man with a troubled past, Paul O'Rourke, begins to wonder if his virtual alter ego is actually a better version of himself. "Paul O'Rourke is a man made of contradictions: he loves the world, but doesn't know how to live in it. He's a Luddite addicted to his iPhone, a dentist with a nicotine habit, a rabid Red Sox fan devastated by their victories, and an atheist not quite willing to let go of God. Then someone begins to impersonate Paul online, and he watches in horror as a website, a Facebook page, and a Twitter account are created in his name. What begins as an outrageous violation of his privacy soon becomes something more soul-frightening: the possibility that the online "Paul" might be a better version of the real thing. As Paul's quest to learn why his identity has been stolen deepens, he is forced to confront his troubled past and his uncertain future in a life disturbingly split between the real and the virtual. At once laugh-out-loud funny about the absurdities of the modern world, and indelibly profound about the eternal questions of the meaning of life, love and truth, TO RISE AGAIN AT A DECENT HOUR is a deeply moving and constantly surprising tour de force" --

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