Beginner's Greek by James Collins

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: January 2008
  • 448pp
  • Sales Rank: 745,227

    Reader Rating: (12 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2008
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Format: Hardcover, 448pp
    • Sales Rank: 745,227

    Synopsis

    Jerry O'Connell lends his talents to this delicious romantic comedy, —-more Cary Grant then Hugh Grant—-begins on a New York to Los Angeles flight.

    When Peter Russell finally meets the woman of his dreams he falls as madly in love as you can on a flight from New York to LA. Her name is Holly. She's achingly pretty with strawberry-blonde hair, and reads Thomas Mann for pleasure. She gives Peter her phone number on a page of The Magic Mountain, but in his room that night Peter finds the page is inexplicably, impossibly, enragingly...gone.

    So begins the immensely entertaining story of Peter and his unrequited love for his best friend's girl; of Charlotte and her less-than-perfect marriage to a man in love with someone else; of Jonathan and his wicked and fateful debauchery; and of Holly, the impetus for it all. Along the way, there's the evil boss, the desirable temptress, miscommunications, misrepresentations, fiendish behavior, letters gone astray, and ultimately, an ending in which every character gets his due. Both incisive and wonderfully funny, this is a brilliantly understated comedy of manners in which love lost is found again.

    "James Collins has written a romantic, funny and insightful page turner about love in modern times, missed opportunities and the wheel of fate (with a blow-out!) that is so engaging and real, you will find it impossible to put down. Peter Russell is an everyman filled with longing, lust and good sense. I promise you will root for him as fate throws him curves aplenty on his path to true love. BEGINNER'S GREEK and Peter Russell are keepers."
    Adriana Trigiani, bestselling author of Lucia,Lucia and Big Stone Gap

    The New York Times - James Kaplan

    …the fact is that whether it is confection or literary comfort food, Beginner's Greek is, from start to finish, delicious. Put aside the two essential improbabilities of the plot…and put yourself in Collins's good (and relentlessly good-doing) hands. All will be well…This is a writer…who knows how to write. One of the great pleasures of this novel—and what sets it quite apart from chick lit—is the sheer felicity of its prose. I am certain Collins could write virtually from birth, but as a middle-aged first novelist, he brings burnished style, wisdom and compassion to the enterprise.

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    Biography

    James Collins writes for The New Yorker and has been an editor at both Time and Spy Magazine. A former Little, Brown editorial assistant, he is forty-eight years old and lives in VIrginia with his family. This is his first novel.

    Customer Reviews

    Pretentious Malarkeyby j_pip

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    July 06, 2009: James Collins is full of himself. Totally and utterly. Dick Montague HAS to be modeled after the author. Keep Webster's close while reading because Collins' verbosity will leave a Harvard grad lost and confused. It's not the fact that his diction is SO high-brow, but he chooses less common words which make reading like driving downtown at rush hour. Stop. Go. Stop. Go.

    Also problematic is the underlying misanthropic tone. Does anyone like anyone in this book? If they do, they're more wishy-washy than senator/ex-presidential hopeful John Kerry.

    And the timeline of the book is so erratic. In the "Reading Group Guide" Collins reveals that he doesn't share his work with anyone until it is completed and ready to publish. Well, in future novels he should have someone read over the manuscript or at least provide some sort of road map so readers can make it through the book.

    This book was not the light, happy summer read i had hoped. With every turn of the page, I felt as if I was reading a combination of Ezra Pound's elitistism, James Joyce's stream of consciousness and e.e. cumming's unconventional orthography.

    The book tried too hard to be something it wasn't.

    James Collins... come down from your high horse. You should realize that you're not God's gift to American literature.

    Was goodby Peachball

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    June 29, 2009: I enjoyed this book. It is not an all-time favorite or anything, but was a good read and kept my interest throughout.


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