Selected Product: | Then We Came to the End: A Novel Paperback Author: Joshua Ferris Publisher: Back Bay Books Release Date: 2008-02-26 ISBN-10: 031601639X ISBN-13: 9780316016391 List Price: $13.99 Average Customer Rating: | | The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao ISBN-10: 1594483299 ISBN-13: 9781594483295 List Price:$14.00 Out Stealing Horses: A Novel ISBN-10: 0312427085 ISBN-13: 9780312427085 List Price:$14.00 The Savage Detectives: A Novel ISBN-10: 0312427484 ISBN-13: 9780312427481 List Price:$15.00 Tree of Smoke: A Novel ISBN-10: 0312427743 ISBN-13: 9780312427740 List Price:$16.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Then We Came to the End: A Novel by Joshua Ferris (ISBN-10: 031601639X, ISBN-13: 9780316016391). At this time we have not yet written a review for Then We Came to the End: A Novel by Joshua Ferris (ISBN-10: 031601639X, ISBN-13: 9780316016391). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com No one knows us quite the same way as the men and women who sit beside us in department meetings and crowd the office refrigerator with their labeled yogurts. Every office is a family of sorts, and the ad agency Joshua Ferris brilliantly depicts in his debut novel is family at its strangest and best, coping with a business downturn in the time-honored way: through gossip, pranks, and increasingly frequent coffee breaks. With a demon's eye for the details that make life worth noticing, Joshua Ferris tells a true and funny story about survival in life's strangest environment--the one we pretend is normal five days a week. I Laughed, I Cried - Three Thoughts | Customer Rating: | Very rarely does a book inspire me to laugh out loud, much less gasp or start tearing up. This book did all of that (which led to some embarrassing moments on the train) and more. I read it several months ago and still think about it at least once a day - although I do work in an office in Chicago that is facing layoffs, so the parallels are undeniable. But I don't want to sell Ferris short - the book would be brilliant even if it didn't resonate with my real life.
The book's real triumph for me (and perhaps the reason some people are so put off by it) is that so much happens by inference, subtext, and implication. With the single (startling, unexpected, heartbreaking) exception, we never really get inside the perspective of the characters. We see their actions, listen to their words, hear their perspective from them, but their true inner life is the central mystery of the book, much as those we spend our time with are truly unknowable. So those moments when truth bubbles to the surface, when we discover something truly personal about a character, are like shocking twists in a suspense film.
When describing this book, I often say it's like Catch-22 in an office, which isn't really fair, but does get at some central things about the book. First off, the characters' unknowability, then the sheer size of the cast, and the time-jumping nature of the narrative, which goes forward and back and around and through the same central time period. But the thing that both books have at their center is a bruised but extremely loving and generous heart that cloaks itself in jokes and distance because the truth is simply too much to bear. I love this book. | Adperson's anomie | Customer Rating: | The clever and sophisticated people in this novel begin by acting in petty and childlike ways. They are a group of workers in an advertising agency in Chicago.. Augusten Burroughs's "Sellevision" and Scott Adam's Dilbert strip come to mind. The book is often mordantly funny, although it includes the murder of a child, a death from cancer, a death in military action, and bouts of depression and mental illness. These actions are effectively counterpointed with concerns about such matters as ownership of a chair or decorating an office cubicle. As the story goes on the characters mature and come to respect each other. I had a vague feeling that there's a deep moral in there somewhere, if I was smart enough to understand it. It uses some narrative gimmicks of the kind I usually dislike, but which are used so effectively that I was drawn in. One schtick is to use the first person plural as a point of view. A large part of the story is told by "we" and not until the last sentence is the reader told who "we' is. Other parts are POV of separate characters, and then, towards the end on of the characters reads from the novel he has been writing about the others. It's complicated but it works. | Funny, fantastic, tragic book (and gorgeous dust jacket design!) | Customer Rating: | | This is one of the best books I've read in years: really unique, funny, and sad. I was drawn to it initially because of the brilliant cover design - fantastic work by designer Jamie Keenan by the way, and too bad the paperback editions don't reuse the same design - and lucked out judging this great book by its cover. | Funny, and a little bit of drama | Customer Rating: | | I think the strongest points of this book are the humorous sections, and the weakest are the drama sections. This is not to say I didn't care about the characters and their sometimes sad, futile work situations. But, there are some stretches of this book that stretched a little too far and I fell my attention wander a bit. Good book, but not the best. | One of the best you'll ever read! | Customer Rating: | | A truly great book and a very very talented writer. You'll enjoy every minute of it. |
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