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194 reviews by:
ailurolily
emotional
hopeful
reflective
sad
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Character
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
I really love the prose of this book, and the characters feel so real. I think Mitch Albom is an amazing writer for many reasons. Also really like the fact that it's not overtly religious. Apart from the heaven aspect, I think many people from many religions, including non-religious people, will take a lot out of this book, and I appreciate when books written from a religious perspective can do that. So this is a pretty solid book. Gonna be on my favorites for sure 👍
Meh. I read the first 13 stories and just couldn't really get into it. I'm not going to give up on him entirely just yet, though. Tons of people recommend reading his other collections like Dandelion Wine or Illustrated man before this one so I'll definitely give those a try before forming an opinion of him as an author.
the parts where he was spending time with Phoebe were my favorites. I really liked reading the connection he had with her. Other than that, I wasn't super into it.
emotional
reflective
sad
slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Character
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I'll admit, it did take a second for me to get into... I wasn't sure what it was about, I had actually started it and quit a few chapters in multiple times, but I don't know. I just wanted to *try* and read it. And I liked it so, _so_ much more than I thought I would. The writing was vivid and descriptive, especially of the descriptions of characters, and although I struggled comprehending the dialect at times, it was fairly easy to digest considering the chapters were fairly short. I liked it. I'd reread.
First time reading this. I thought it was a really sweet, thought-provoking book. I didn't really enjoy the translater's (Richard Howard) writing style all that much. I'll likely reread this soon with a different translater.
challenging
informative
reflective
medium-paced
This book was... amazing. Incredible. Really gives you something to think about. Seriously such an great read, everyone should pick it up. This is the kind of book that sticks with you looooong after you read it
emotional
hopeful
reflective
sad
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Character
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Complicated
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
A Man Called Ove was a short, emotional, happy-sad read. Ove lead a depressing and lonely life, for most of his life. I’m going to start with the areas this book shined for me:
I adored the relationships he built with the community around him… Especially with Parvaneh’s children, and Mirsad. There was this very special moment towards the end where he connected with the older daughter… He went into her bedroom while she was playing a game, and he sat down next to her, watching her play, while she told him what she was doing. And another moment between them was when she told him that she had asked for an iPad because she had a passion for drawing, and he saw that spark. I have mixed feelings about Parvaneh and Ove, but overall, she really did help him move on from Sonja and find the joy in life again. There were many touching moments in the book, where Ove began to let his walls down, and that was really what the entire book was about… finding a community of people who love you for you, and becoming a family. It was a very sweet, but very sad story, and the end never ceases to… almost bring a tear to my eye haha :)
Now for the bad… Personally, I’m not a huge fan of Backman’s writing style. I even read the sneak peak for another one of his books, Anxious People, and didn’t enjoy the prose there, either. I think that’s probably a big reason I can’t give this one 4 or 5 stars. I also felt as if most of the characters were a bit flat, and I’m not entirely sure why I feel that way. Most of the side characters didn’t really get much time to develop, and I don’t necessarily think they should be given that time, but it did still leave me a bit wanting. Sonja and Parvaneh were really the driving forces in this novel, with everybody else being sort of in the background. It is very hard to develop characters in a third-person limited POV, however. I can’t fully articulate WHY the supporting characters feel lackluster, all I know was that that was the vibe I got while reading. Sometimes Parvaneh was really annoying as well. Constantly insisting on things and overstepping Ove’s boundaries. There was even one point when she said, unprompted, and only after knowing him for a few weeks (maybe months?), that she would help him pack Sonja’s things away and I was like GIRL. You do not know him that well. There was another part where she demanded he take her and her children to the hospital, then she made him sit and watch her kids when he didn’t want to, then she gave her 3-year-old a crayon in the car, and when he objected to that she was like ‘well she might try to do something worse than getting crayon in your car’. I feel like it’s pretty reasonable to not want a 3 y/o with a crayon in your car… So yeah. Parvaneh annoyed me a bit. But, I dunno. That could have been intentional. And, as for the scene where she demanded he take her to the hospital, it was right afterOve attempted suicide, and it seemed like she may have noticed. So possibly she was pushy because she didn’t want to leave him alone. Who’s to say.
A Man Called Ove was a touching story, and although I didn’t find it as incredible as others have, I would still recommend it to people.
I adored the relationships he built with the community around him… Especially with Parvaneh’s children, and Mirsad. There was this very special moment towards the end where he connected with the older daughter… He went into her bedroom while she was playing a game, and he sat down next to her, watching her play, while she told him what she was doing. And another moment between them was when she told him that she had asked for an iPad because she had a passion for drawing, and he saw that spark. I have mixed feelings about Parvaneh and Ove, but overall, she really did help him move on from Sonja and find the joy in life again. There were many touching moments in the book, where Ove began to let his walls down, and that was really what the entire book was about… finding a community of people who love you for you, and becoming a family. It was a very sweet, but very sad story, and the end never ceases to… almost bring a tear to my eye haha :)
Now for the bad… Personally, I’m not a huge fan of Backman’s writing style. I even read the sneak peak for another one of his books, Anxious People, and didn’t enjoy the prose there, either. I think that’s probably a big reason I can’t give this one 4 or 5 stars. I also felt as if most of the characters were a bit flat, and I’m not entirely sure why I feel that way. Most of the side characters didn’t really get much time to develop, and I don’t necessarily think they should be given that time, but it did still leave me a bit wanting. Sonja and Parvaneh were really the driving forces in this novel, with everybody else being sort of in the background. It is very hard to develop characters in a third-person limited POV, however. I can’t fully articulate WHY the supporting characters feel lackluster, all I know was that that was the vibe I got while reading. Sometimes Parvaneh was really annoying as well. Constantly insisting on things and overstepping Ove’s boundaries. There was even one point when she said, unprompted, and only after knowing him for a few weeks (maybe months?), that she would help him pack Sonja’s things away and I was like GIRL. You do not know him that well. There was another part where she demanded he take her and her children to the hospital, then she made him sit and watch her kids when he didn’t want to, then she gave her 3-year-old a crayon in the car, and when he objected to that she was like ‘well she might try to do something worse than getting crayon in your car’. I feel like it’s pretty reasonable to not want a 3 y/o with a crayon in your car… So yeah. Parvaneh annoyed me a bit. But, I dunno. That could have been intentional. And, as for the scene where she demanded he take her to the hospital, it was right after
A Man Called Ove was a touching story, and although I didn’t find it as incredible as others have, I would still recommend it to people.
Graphic: Suicide attempt
Moderate: Miscarriage
Minor: Homophobia
adventurous
funny
informative
lighthearted
reflective
fast-paced
I mean it was decent. I couldn't really tell whether the narrator's ideas/biases were Heraclitus's (he was the narrator) or the author's. I'm sure people who are interested in getting into philosophy would like this, but I guess seeing as I am a bit indifferent to philosophy, it was just kinda meh for me. Chapter 6 had some really interesting concepts that I'll probably be thinking about, but yeah. It wasn't bad, it wasn't amazing Imo.