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Hardcover The Man Who Wrote the Book

ISBN: 0609604686

ISBN13: 9780609604687

The Man Who Wrote the Book

It takes a bit of doing to create a sad sack ingrate of a protagonist and then actually get readers to root for him. Erik Tarloff's second novel, The Man Who Wrote the Book, concerns a divorced... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The Man Who Wrote the Book

I check every couple of months to see if Tarloff has come out with a new novel because I love his work. I picked up this book on a bargain table for $1.99. What a find! It's an easy read that is very entertaining. The main character's internal monologues are hilarious. I found myself envisioning the entire story on the big screen. I've already casted the actors. (I've been trying to get some of my friends in the entertainment industry to option it). Don't pass this up.

A great story

This book is not one of the classics by any means. It is, however, a great piece of fiction. The story is engaging and the characters are likable. The plot also moves along nicely and doesn't present us with anything too incredulous. A nice, light read which everyone can enjoy.

Five stars, but one flaw....

I really enjoyed this book and thus was surprised to see all the heavy criticism it received. You know that a book is not going over too well when when only 10% or 20% of the readers find the 5-star reviews helpful, which seemed to be kind of a pattern here. Nothwithstanding all that, I loved this book, and would heartily recommend it, although I wonder if males may go for it more than females. Anyway, before I lavish a little praise on the book (which everyone will disagree with anyway), let me get to the flaw (which I will try to do without giving anything away).In any novel, virtually by necessity, certain unrealistic things have to happen; things that are not quite right. If nothing unrealistic happened, then nothing would happen at all, and you wouldn't have a story. This pivotal aspect of a novel was well described by the excellent novelist Donald Westlake as follows: "There are moments in almost any novel when it's necessary to move a character from one position to another, so that you can move on with the story...Once the character is moved into the new position, everything is fine, but in order to make the transition, the writer has to bend somehing out of shape. Some behavior is wrong, some reaction is wrong. It's a rip in the fabric of the novel, but it's necessary to get the story where it has to go...Other writers, reading the book, might notice the lump in the batter, but most readers won't."The trick in any novel is to try and make this "rip in the fabric" as unnoticable as possible. For me, the biggest rip in the fabric here was in fact a reaction, namely the public reaction to Ezra's work product (and I'm being vague here simply so as not to give anything away for those who haven't read the book, but those who have read the book will know exactly what I mean). That reaction just struck me as totally not credible, namely that such a product would ever, ever work its way into the public consciousness, much less at the speed of the light which this did. It would be one thing if an author was actually trying to be "high-brow low-brow" (like Nabokov's Lolita, Lawrence's Lady Chatterly's Lover or some similar work by a reputable and known author), but Ezra's work (or should we say Isaac's work?) never had such aims for a second--particularly given that it was a paperback with a dopey title and a voluptuous woman on the cover. Thus, I could just never buy into that turn of events even for a second. Despite that, I though the book was great anyway. Maybe I'm just not as sophisticated as those who almost snobbishly put down the writing in the book (or gave it backhanded compliments like calling it nice "light" reading or "summer" reading), but I thought that the writing was great, the characters were great, the book was fuuny, the dialogue was funny--in fact, except for the above problem, I liked everything about the book. It hooked me right from the get-go and didn't let go the whole way through. In short, I recommen

A Good Summer Read

I really enjoyed this book. I still don't know which bothers me more, a man making it with a Penthouse model in the sauna or that the man's name is "Ezra" and making it with a Penthouse model in a sauna. This book is just plain fun. The interaction between Ezra and Ike is quick witted and light. What a good friendship should be.

A Must for Summer Reading

THE MAN WHO WROTE THE BOOK is a must for this summer's light reading. Tarloff has shown he can gring the same sardonic wit, incisive humor and well-turned phrase to the world of small-time academia as to Belt-way politics. His Ezra Gordon, the neurotic, insecure, failing Poetry Professor is classic Woody Allen, complete with requisite alter ego, whose first-try porn novel is a smahing, if unsettling success.Tarloff manages to make implausible scenarios and characters plausible, and he clearly knows the world of "words". One only wishes had had let more of EA Peau's porduct into THE MAN as well. One suspects that effort would be at least as credible.This is a thoroughly enjoyable read, which is guaranteed to bring more than a few chuckles and have the reader developing cast choices for all the characters.ES, Boston
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