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Author - Peter Carey ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Hardcover Book item from Knopf was reviewed on 4-Nov-2008. Search ISBN:030726372X offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. His Illegal Self Reference Book. Classifications : Contemporary Literature & Fiction Subjects Books Literary Literature & Fiction Subjects Books General AAS Literature & Fiction Subjects Books Hardcover Binding (binding) Refinements Books Printed Book . Click the following link to view the cover of His Illegal Self. Related topics: Contemporary. Subjects. Books. Literary. Subjects. Books. General AAS. Subjects. Books. Hardcover. requestid: aafeb6f0-461e-4c9d-b3bb-6f0881179055requestprocessingtime: 0.1219910000000000 salesrank: 69331 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 130940105570 1) Hardcover Book His Illegal Self by Knopf. Each chapter is a jigsaw puzzle piece and when put together, the portrait is complex, engaging, terrifying, and ultimately satisfying. There is a challenge to the narrative, like Carey expects the reader to fill in the blanks, and thus brings him into the story actively. A sense of palpable dread hangs over the entire affair as the reader invests emotionally into the fate of the mother (who is no mother) and the son. This is a terrific, fierce novel.¤ 2) Hardcover Book His Illegal Self by Knopf. Who ever wrote the inside flap summing up this book did a better job then the other telling his boring no one cares story. If you can even call it a story cause there wasnt much of one.Nothing happens at all, after the kidnapping. Dont waste your time with it, there are a million books that are better and more enjoyable to read.¤ 3) Hardcover Book His Illegal Self by Knopf. For somebody who grew up in the sixties, I found this novel to be very interesting. Yet, I have to admit I was a bit confused in the first chapter. I found myself rereading scenes, struggling to understand whether or not the girl was in fact Che (the boy´s) mother, or not. The individual scenes are fascinating, and I was very interested in watching the relationship between Dial and the boy evolve, however vague. I would have liked a little more help from the writer in terms of better defining the relationships. I am a Carey fan, and I loved Theft - this one not so much, but I´ll be looking for his next one.¤ 4) Hardcover Book His Illegal Self by Knopf. I was trapped on a plane reading this book. It´s so disappointing. You want to toss your hands up and say WHO CARES? It was 200 pages devoid of anything worth reading.¤ 5) Hardcover Book His Illegal Self by Knopf. Seven-year-old Che, the son of absent revolutionaries, lives with his grandmother on New York´s Upper East Side. One day, a woman named Dial, who Che believes is his mother, whisks him away from everything familiar. Che and Dial end up at a hippie commune in the Australian outback. In an academic sense, I recognize the talent behind Carey´s sensitive and nuanced portrayal of the mother-son relationship, but I didn´t really enjoy reading this novel. For one thing, the Australian outback sounds terribly grim. Everyone is rude or weird, dusty, and hungry. For another thing, a good bit of the narrative is improbable. Why Australia? There´s also a nudist who doesn´t really have a well-understood place in the story. Overall, His Illegal Self lacks cohesion and appeal despite the masterful depiction of Che´s relationship to Dial.¤ 6) Hardcover Book His Illegal Self by Knopf. When the boy was almost eight, a woman stepped out of the elevator into the apartment on East Sixty-second Street and he recognized her straightaway. No one had told him to expect it. That was pretty typical of growing up with Grandma Selkirk . . . No one would dream of saying, Here is your mother returned to you. Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 2-Dec-2008, 030726372X9780307263728, 340-2X0-030-300-500-2X1-8
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