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Paolo Giordano's The Solitude of Prime Numbers. Gaps Send a noteboard - 15/11/2010 12:47:19 AM
Not going to be a long post, but I do have a curiosity about this book, because I purchased it when it was first available in the US and have absolutely hated it. I still haven't finished it. I read probably 150 pages in one sitting, turning each page with the expectation that something good was going to happen, that it had to happen based on the slobbering reviews the book had received -- and yet was never fulfilled. I'm actually about 20 pages from the end, though I haven't picked it up in a month or so as I've been concentrating on actual literature.

That's too much.

What I mean to say is: was anyone else just a bit disappointed, or am I just off the mark here? I don't find the writing to be superlative, but that's fine, as I've often encountered so-so writing which is more than compensated for by good story telling, a deft unraveling of ideas or emotion, or a novel concept. I just didn't see that here, and I as I continuously eye my bookshelf I wonder: am I wrong, or is it?
I cannot even copy his manner because the manner of his prose was the manner of his thinking and that was a dazzling succession of gaps; and you cannot ape a gap because you are bound to fill it in somehow or other -- and blot it out in the process. -- Nabokov
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Paolo Giordano's The Solitude of Prime Numbers. - 15/11/2010 12:47:19 AM 606 Views
It has an exciting title - 15/11/2010 01:48:56 PM 391 Views
Yes. - 15/11/2010 07:06:46 PM 402 Views
Re: Yes. - 15/11/2010 07:26:25 PM 433 Views
Really? It's pretty big around here. *NM* - 15/11/2010 08:19:14 PM 146 Views
Have you read it? - 15/11/2010 08:21:08 PM 411 Views
I'm afraid not, no, but like Gaps, I've heard good things about it. - 15/11/2010 09:00:20 PM 394 Views

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