Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Funny, not hilarious... and good, not great, February 24, 2007
This review is from: Him Her Him Again The End of Him (Hardcover)
While working on her thesis at Cambridge University, the narrator of Him Her Him Again The End of Him meets Eugene, a philosophy major who waltzes in and out of her life over the next decade and whom she obsessively alters even the smallest details of her life to accommodate. Though Eugene routinely walks all over her and steps on her oft-profferred heart, she still comes crawling back with disappointing regularity and puts her own need aside to make room for his. Over the course of the novel she sets aside her thesis, leaves England, moves in with her parents, finds work as a writer for a television sketch comedy, loses work, and through it all the only constant is her obsession with getting Eugene to love her.
The protagonist of Patricia Marx's first novel is in equal measure an amusing, instrospective, overthinking mess and an irresponsible, unambitious, mediocre victim. Whichever part of her you enjoy most seems to skew your overall views of the book. I couldn't get over the way she let Eugene treat her, though I am all for first love and the way it can devastate and influence the way you live your life. Though the book is supposed to be dubbed one of the funniest ever written, I thought the story itself was depressing. It is funny a lot of the time and the narrator herself is amusing a lot of the time without even trying, but the tone and direction of the book weren't at all entertaining. I liked a good deal of this story, but I hated Eugene and as he was the principal male character of the story it made it difficult to enjoy the entire novel. Him Her Him Again The End of Him was funny, not hilarious, and it was most definitely good--not great.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
23 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Him Her....Fun!, December 30, 2006
This review is from: Him Her Him Again The End of Him (Hardcover)
Despite its unfortunate title, which refers to the sections the book is divided into, this book is indeed a fun read, and quite engaging. The author, Patricia Marx, has a unique turn of phrase that will at times bring you to laugh out loud, and will cause you to feel the frustration of our heroine, whose name we never learn.
The plot is basic: our heroine, a student at Cambridge, meets and almost immediately gives both her heart and her virginity to Eugene, a cad of the first order. Despite his many faults, our heroine finds herself literally obsessed with Eugene, even after he dumps her for the sickly Margaret. We watch as, over a period of ten years, our heroine pines for the shallow and selfish Eugene, putting aside her own needs and bouncing from job to job as she searches for whatever it is that will make her life perfect. Eugene flits in and out of her life like an annoying fly, and yet she allows him to dictate almost everything about her existence. It is both frustrating and funny as we follow her non-growth into its eventual climax, cheering her on and hoping that she will experience an epiphany that allows Eugene to get what's coming to him.
Marx has a brilliant writing style, and she uses it to both string the reader along on the heroine's web of obsession and to make said reader laugh as she reveals bits and pieces that bring the story to its end. At times it felt as though our heroine would never reach enlightenment, and the story dragged as a result. But overall this is a gem of a novel, and should be recommended to all who enjoy an author with a gift for comedy.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Funny, but not enough, March 3, 2007
This review is from: Him Her Him Again The End of Him (Hardcover)
If there is one problem with nearly every SNL skit-turned movie it's that the audience is asked to endure a one-joke premise stretched unmercifully into a feature length film.
This is the print version of same. Smart yet neurotic girl falls for arrogant cad, whines to witty and eccentric friends, tolerates family, comes out a bit wiser. The shallow characters are asked to carry a storyline that doesn't have the interest to last through a novel. There are truly clever moments that had me laughing out loud, but the plot was disappointingly simple.
This has the feel of a Tina Fey hopeful trying to step away from her skit comedy roots -- but only a few steps away. I'd like to read something more ambitious from Marx; she has talent.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|