|
| Run | 
enlarge | Author: Ann Patchett Publisher: Harper Category: Book
List Price: $25.95 Buy Used: $5.35 You Save: $20.60 (79%)
New (10) Used (12) Collectible (3) from $5.35
Avg. Customer Rating: 201 reviews Sales Rank: 395938
Format: Bargain Price Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6.1 x 1.3
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 ASIN: B00150II3U
Publication Date: September 25, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Very good condition, clean and tight, with subtle shelf and edge wear, multiple copies, may be an ex library copy, we will send the best available, prompt shipping, excellent service.
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
Since their mother's death, Tip and Teddy Doyle have been raised by their loving, possessive, and ambitious father. As the former mayor of Boston, Bernard Doyle wants to see his sons in politics, a dream the boys have never shared. But when an argument in a blinding New England snowstorm inadvertently causes an accident that involves a stranger and her child, all Bernard Doyle cares about is his ability to keep his children—all his children—safe. Set over a period of twenty-four hours, Run takes us from the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard to a home for retired Catholic priests in downtown Boston. It shows us how worlds of privilege and poverty can coexist only blocks apart from each other, and how family can include people you've never even met. As in her bestselling novel Bel Canto, Ann Patchett illustrates the humanity that connects disparate lives, weaving several stories into one surprising and endlessly moving narrative. Suspenseful and stunningly executed, Run is ultimately a novel about secrets, duty, responsibility, and the lengths we will go to protect our children.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 196 more reviews...
A Hallmark Made For TV Movie in Book Form September 5, 2007 144 out of 203 found this review helpful
Page 295. I finally made it through this book! Ann Patchett definitely did not convince me with 'Run'. The novel, which by and large covers only one day, is about a Caucasian, well-to-do father with one biological son and two adopted African-American sons, all of them grown, and about what happens when a tragic chance encounter changes their lives. Without wanting to giving away the story, this book deals with complicated relationships between parents and children, but most of all it deals with choices that people make and the consequences resulting from these choices.
So far so good, but this book does not work. The reasons are many: 1. Issue is piled up upon issue and not a single one is tackled in depth - each one would be worthy of its own novel, yet other than describing them in way too many contrived words and dialogue nothing evolves or is addressed or solved. To name just a few: Race, Adoption, Family, Religion...
2. Every protagonist in this book has deep and complicated thoughts in every situation - not once can one of them simply "be". It is as if the only way Ms. Patchett knows how to create a character is by letting him or her think - not, on occasion, just observe or be part of something. The little eleven-year old girl, Kenya, for example, thinks through the most complicated adult topics and scenarios and does so with a deeply intellectual approach most of the time. All while she is scared to death that her mother is in the hospital going through surgery and she herself is forced to stay with a family of more or less total strangers.
Yet - despite gaining an intimate and oh yes! very lenghty insight in every person's thoughts - all of the characters in the book remain strangely 'bloodless' and one-dimensional...Maybe this is because they don't really LIVE in the pages of this novel, they more or less only think and stay passive...
3. Many times the thoughts and dialogues are contrived and just sound plain wrong. Sentences like "God had given her a short, hard life but a perfect set of straight white teeth to help her endure it." make me cringe and I have nothing more to add to that.
4. My last point is a very personal observation: This book is boring, boring, boring. In my title I call it a Hallmark Made For TV Movie in Book Form, and that's the best I can describe it; it is predictable, shows hardly any character development, and introduces way too many improbabilities in order to come to a sentimental conclusion in the end - which, to say it again - took 295 very long pages to achieve.
A beautiful novel written with artistry and heart August 20, 2007 109 out of 117 found this review helpful
Run is the latest novel from the pen of Ann Patchett, the acclaimed author of Bel Canto. It is the story of an unusual Boston family. Bernard Doyle is a former Mayor of that city. He is a widower, his wife Bernadette having died of cancer some years before. He has three sons: Sullivan, the eldest and two adopted sons, Tip and Teddy. Tip and Teddy are biological brothers and they are black. It is their story that is most rivetting and provides much of this novel's essence and consequence. For the two young men, 21 and 20 respectively, are profoundly different. Tip is drawn towards science, Teddy towards religion. But there is much more at stake here. Patchett creates a beautifully detailed snapshot of America at the beginning of a new century. And through interactions whose randomness and emotional complexity these characters do not fully comprehend, some powerful and despairing truths regarding race, class, politics and faith are uncovered. Patchett's glistening prose reminds me of a jeweler studying a diamond with steely precision and a cool, clear radiance that reveals every facet and flaw.
Her elegant prose is strongly reminiscent of another writer: James Joyce in his seminal story The Dead, perhaps the finest short story ever written. Even the technique seems similar. Here is spare, limpid prose laying bare the deepest recesses of the human heart. Here are the dead and the absent forever impacting the lives of the living and damaged. It struck me that Patchett has thoroughly absorbed Joyce's technique. This is high praise indeed, but impossible to prove. Or so I thought until Teddy quotes several sentences from the famous ending of The Dead. With some vindication, I think I can safely claim that Ann Patchett has used Joyce as her model. It is an indication of the artistry of this fine writer that she has done so successfully. This is a brilliant novel, filled with truth and deep feeling. Her artistry is quiet, never calling attention to itself. But artistry it is. You won't forget this book. My strongest possible recommendation for Run.
Mike Birman
Upon All The Living and The Dead August 20, 2007 38 out of 47 found this review helpful
"His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and faintly falling; like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead." James Joyce 'The Dead'
Ann Patchett has written her sixth book in the framework of a family and how the end justify the means. Each character is a study in love and the affection they have for each other. The gifts that are given by these people to each other is overflowing with meaning.
Doyle, an ex-mayor of Boston had given up his office, voluntarily, but in the realm of disgrace. His profession in politics was his love, and he had hoped that one of his sons would follow in his footsteps. On this cold winter's night he brings his two younger sons, Tip and Teddy to hear Jesse Jackson. Doyle's hope was that Jesse would put the 'fire' of politics in one of his sons. Tip and Teddy had been adopted as infants. Doyle and his wife, Bernadette had one son, Sullivan, and wanted more, and when the chance to adopt a black baby came they grabbed it. They then found his brother, 14 months old was also available, and their family became complete, or almost. Within a short period of time, Bernadette, the love of Doyle's life, became ill with cancer and subsequently died. Doyle was left to bring up the boys on his own.
On this night, Tip who goes to Harvard and is studying Ichthyology finally becomes tired of Doyle pushing his political preference in his face, and he starts an arguement with Doyle. It becomes more heated than either wanted, and Tip turns to go and walks in front of an on-coming car. He is saved by a black woman who pushes him out of the way. She is injured and rushed to the hospital. Not knowing the extent of her injuries as of yet, Doyle volunteers to care for the woman's young daughter. A full family at best. Now the issues of the past come to haunt the entire family, and some answers must be found. Tip and Teddy must come to terms with their past. And, Doyle must answer to his children.
The life we lead is sometimes not what we think it is. The past may come to haunt us and decisions made for us and before us may not be what we want. Ann Patchett has the ability of taking a simple plot and making it into something it is not. The family and its center is the important aspect of her writing. This book was simplistic in plot, and the message was easy to grasp. It is a good novel, not one of her best, but enjoyable. After 'Bel Canto' the expectations were very high. There is something missing here and the plot though well devised is not as satisfying. But Ann Patchett's writing makes up for any deficit in plot- she is glorious in her use of the written word. Much to be admired.
Recommended. prisrob 08-20-07
Bel Canto (P.S.)
Truth & Beauty: A Friendship
"There must be people everywhere we never see." August 24, 2007 22 out of 31 found this review helpful
Ann Patchett's "Run" explores the concepts of race, religion, class and, most importantly, family through the eyes of a pair of families over a twenty-four hour period. First are the Doyles: Bernard, the patriarch and former mayor of Boston; his biological son, Sullivan, whose grief over his deceased mother has caused him to descend into perpetual screw-up status; Teddy, the black son that he adopted after his now departed wife was unable to have any more children; and Tip, Teddy's biological older brother who was unexpectedly included in the adoption agreement after his biological mother decided to give him up too. Despite their mixed race status the Doyles are a pretty typical family. Bernard loves his sons, but his efforts to push Teddy and Tip into political careers are dangerously toeing the line of becoming overbearing. This festering disgruntlement leads to a near-accident for one of his sons, who gets saved from walking in front of a car at the last second by a good Samaritan who ends up taking the hit instead. But this good Samaritan turns out to be no stranger to Tip and Teddy, bringing us to family number two: the Mosers; led by Tennessee, who is the impoverished biological mother who gave Tip and Teddy up but has been following their lives closely while raising her daughter, Kenya in the projects a few blocks away. She has been watching them grow up, but they have never noticed her. Over the next twenty-four hours, while Tennessee lies in a hospital bed and the Doyles are forced to temporarily assume custody of Kenya, questions regarding family, loyalty, sacrifice and forgiveness will have to be answered.
Having never read her incredibly well-received novel Bel Canto (P.S.), this was my first experience with Ann Patchett. While she certainly has a sweet tone and a sentimental eye, I must admit that I don't really see what the fuss is about. The truth is that while her characters are fairly developed they never really become more than mere character types to me (the loving but overbearing father, screw-up son, affable twin, strict twin, etc.). They don't seem like real people, and the set-ups feel forced and contrived. Characters go on expeditions into the winter air or stay awake and then go off to sleep at set intervals in order for Patchett to give each of them a turn at being alone with each other to share a moment. It feels like a play, where at least one character has to be onstage at every moment regardless of the time of night, and the others are waiting in the wings for their cue to enter. This is a novel of plot-related conveniences, right down to the fact that a pair of adopted brothers apparently never once thought about finding their biological mother, so that when she unexpectedly surfaces it comes as a complete shock to them. Come on, even after their adopted mother passed away they never succumbed to curiosity? And while Patchett's descriptive style is warm and welcoming it is also prone to some wild continuity gaffes. Lying in her hospital bed, Tennessee notes that all of the nurses taking care of her are very skinny, prompting her to wonder if the hospital had hired "starving refugees" - but in the next sentence a nurse is un-ironically described as "fat and sickly pale". Later on, a character suffers a fall so fast that he didn't even have time to throw his hands out to protect himself, resulting in a cut on his head from where it hit the ground. But describing how he appeared after the fall, Patchett remarks that one arm is pinned underneath his head - "both above his head and behind it." That was very surprising to me. Most surprising of all to me, however, was that despite the novel's seemingly liberal leanings it comes off as very insulting to the poor. Patchett unwittingly argues that a poor person, no matter how loving or well intentioned, is not fit for parenthood. I don't think she meant for it to come off that way, but that's what I got from her story.
Patchett seems like a capable enough writer, but I don't believe that "Run" is her finest hour. It's sweet but unintentionally rude, intelligent but hopelessly flawed. I'm sure that many readers will enjoy this book for its complicated family drama (book clubs in particular might have some good discussions about it), so I would probably recommend it to fans of Jodi Picoult. Otherwise, I'm tempted to tell you to skip it.
Grade: C-
Run: in which direction are we headed? March 22, 2008 19 out of 25 found this review helpful
I really wanted to enjoy this novel. Unfortunately, it just didn't work for me. There is some fine writing here, and some great imagery. But the whole story: the mixture of choice and chance just didn't engage me.
The only character who really caught my interest was Tip, but it wasn't enough to really hook me. I kept reading simply because I wanted to see where the story would end. And having reached the destination, I don't consider the journey was really worth it.
Perhaps I was running in the wrong direction?
Jennifer Cameron-Smith
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |