The good luck of right now

The good luck of right now

2014 • 284 pages

Ratings9

Average rating4.2

15

Sooo... the thing is, I am still not sure how I feel about this book. I kept Reading it expecting to like it more, and by the last chapters it had happened: I was used to Bartholomew's quirkiness (he's 39, bound to have Asperger's, lost his mom, nobody knows how his bills are being paid, including him, takes everyone to his home because he's very kind, never had a job, has a crush on a girl he calls The Girlbrarian and literally hear voices. Ah, before I forget: the whole book is told through his letters to Richard Gere, whom he believes was some sort of vessel to his mom.)Still, it was not absolutely lovable like Flowers for Algernon or The curious incident of the dog in the nighttime (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1050.Mark_Haddon) or even my favorite of the genre (or what comes to my mind when I think of the genre, which is loosely bizarrely depicted mentally characters), Unexpectedly MIlo, by Matthew Dicks. Then, at some point I thought, why did I look for it in the first place?
(drum rolls): because he's the author of The silver linings playbook, which I hadn't read but saw the movie and really enjoyed. And now it just occurs to me that this exact book would probably be amazing turned into a screenplay, maybe it's just the guy's talent.
Or maybe I'm rambling. Sorry about that.

March 8, 2014Report this review