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5.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Summer Read!
I have just read and enjoyed Michael Hoffman's "The Coat That Covers Him and Other Stories." It was a long but worthwhile read written in a unique style. Six shorter stories set the mood for the main story. An artful combination of plots drive these stories with subjects ranging from a man who believes that he is a murderer and is approached by a young girl...
Published on June 9, 2005 by Tyrone V. Banks

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3.0 out of 5 stars poetic writing

Michael Hoffman is an excellent, dramatic, fluent, insightful and literate writer. He is also a world traveler, and he sets his scenes interestingly in many worldwide cities. It looks as if he has finally settled in Japan where he makes a living writing and interpreting Japanese for English newspapers. He is a trained, professional writer. I have found that many...
Published on January 8, 2005 by Sheldon R. Waxman


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5.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Summer Read!, June 9, 2005
By 
Tyrone V. Banks (Newington, CT USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Coat That Covers Him: and Other Stories (Paperback)
I have just read and enjoyed Michael Hoffman's "The Coat That Covers Him and Other Stories." It was a long but worthwhile read written in a unique style. Six shorter stories set the mood for the main story. An artful combination of plots drive these stories with subjects ranging from a man who believes that he is a murderer and is approached by a young girl
looking to sell her body to him followed by a man who loses his key thus creating an unexpected chain of events that you'd never imagine. (The ideas are so witty and complex that I am allowing myself a run on sentence with this one!)

The main story, however, is about Sidney Levin. Sid is a well
traveled man involved in a love triangle between his wife Natalie and his Japanese girlfriend Keiko. He lost Keiko as she married another man named Jon many years before. After Jon dies, he pounces on the opportunity to rekindle that flame with Keiko. However, he willingly submits to the advances of Keiko's teenage daughter Mariko and she is impregnated.She moves in
with her Uncle and Sid seems to settle for Natalie...but the story does not really end there...

These stories will engage various senses as you read, comprehend and "digest" the material. It is written in a poetic form that grants the stories and the characters an added sense of tangibility as some of the emotions, reactions and responses are experienced by all of us in some small way. Hoffman's travels to Japan and Canada serve as a common
theme as the characters always seem to end up or exist in one of those locations or the other, with Japan being the predominant location.

Add "The Coat That Covers Him and Other Stories." to your Summer reading list! If you're looking for an engaging read that can be accomplished in a day or even a week - you will find it in the pages of this book.

Tyrone V. Banks
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3.0 out of 5 stars poetic writing, January 8, 2005
By 
Sheldon R. Waxman (South Haven, MI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Coat That Covers Him: and Other Stories (Paperback)

Michael Hoffman is an excellent, dramatic, fluent, insightful and literate writer. He is also a world traveler, and he sets his scenes interestingly in many worldwide cities. It looks as if he has finally settled in Japan where he makes a living writing and interpreting Japanese for English newspapers. He is a trained, professional writer. I have found that many authors so trained attempt too much literacy and become showoffs-all to the detriment of the story. Hoffman is minimal in this aspect but he does assume that all readers understand French. The Japanese is translated but the French is not. Happily, they are short phrases that can be glossed over.

The book starts out with six short stories. They are enigmatic and difficult to understand (weird, bizarre, Kafkaesque) but the beautiful language overcomes this. It is poetic in style. I don't understand, however, why these short stories were put in the book. The later novel is the title showpiece. At the very least they should have been put at the end.

The novel is about a mixed up guy, Sidney Levin. He flounders throughout in a semi-insane mode. He's married to Natalie in America with whom he had a son, who eventually commits suicide for lack of Sid's attention and the revelation to him of Sid's awful behavior. However, Sid feels his heart is with Keiko in Japan. He lost her many years before to his friend and rival, Jon. Jon dies and Sid renews his romance his romance with Keiko. He's a bad father anyway so it doesn't give him much pause.

The story then goes back and forth between Natalie and Keiko because Sid can't decide which one is better for him.
Keiko's teenage daughter, Mariko, is overly imaginative. She thinks in a previous life she was Charlotte Corday, Marat's murderer. She is provocative with Sidney and it appears early on she wants Sid's semen. Screwed up guy that he is, Sid engages in an affair with her. Unfortunately, IMHO, it would have been nice to have some sex descriptions.

Mariko becomes pregnant and the scene shifts to Montreal where Sid's brother, Leonard, lives. Brian, Jon's brother, lives there too. The story somewhat bogs down after that. Brian platonically, as Mariko's "uncle", boards her and her child for four years, during which time Mariko and her daughter (Charlotte) are banished from Sid's presence, as he lives his life with Natalie. There is a reunion and the story ends.

All in all, it is a good but long read. IMHO, it could have been chopped, and it is a little too descriptive with a tangled and lengthy storyline. I happen to be "story driven", and am biased against overly done character driven stories. Hoffman's use of language and dialogue, however, are worth it.
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The Coat That Covers Him: and Other Stories
The Coat That Covers Him: and Other Stories by Michael Hoffman (Paperback - December 7, 2004)
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