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Loop Group
 
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Loop Group [Unabridged] [Audible Audio Edition]

by Larry McMurtry (Author), C.J. Critt (Narrator)
1.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)
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Product Details

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 9 hours and 25 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Recorded Books
  • Audible.com Release Date: December 22, 2004
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B000782EWM
  • Average Customer Review: 1.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)
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Editorial Reviews

Pulitzer Prize-winning, New York Times best-selling author Larry McMurtry is one of America's best novelists. Several of his books are modern classics, including Lonesome Dove and Terms of Endearment, which was adapted into an Academy Award-winning motion picture. Now McMurtry delivers a funny yet sobering road trip novel reminiscent of Thelma and Louise and featuring two of the most original women to appear in fiction for quite some time.

Maggie runs a group that dubs voices for movies. She spends much of her time fending off her three pushy daughters, and gets her kicks with her far older Sicilian lover. Connie, on the other hand, has a taste for younger men. These two best friends are getting past their prime, which is why they plan to have one last great adventure. But on the road from Texas to California and back, the women get caught up in events beyond their control. Packing a .38 Special, they blaze their trail across the Southwest, bumping into one zany character after another.

©2004 Larry McMurty; (P)2004 Recorded Books, LLC

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Customer Reviews

40 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (27)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
1.7 out of 5 stars (40 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Where do I go to get my time back?, January 28, 2006
By 
Fredly19 (Coopersville, MI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Loop Group (Hardcover)
I am really angry with myself for actually finishing this book. It was so bad, I kept thinking, "But this is Larry McMurtry - he'll tie it all up and salvage something out of this mess!"

He doesn't. From the first sentence to the last, this is the most empty, vapid, uninspiring, inane book I've ever read. This is my first review, and I was not happy to find that I had to give it at least 1 star.

I love kooky, unconventional characters. But there has to be some reason for them, and some imagination used in writing them. The "Zany characters" you meet in this book are empty and uninteresting. Every single character in this book is driven solely by their basest instincts. There's even a determined and relentless child molester, who is treated as just another zany character. The main characters can't manage to summon so much as a whiff of disapproval for their pederastic friend, and no sympathy is to be found for his 9-year-old victim.

There is no pacing to the plot. Once the big road trip finally started, I kept thinking that something worth writing about will happen any time now... instead, suddenly the trip is over. Then, after the return... nothing happens.

Character development? Maggie and Connie are the two most self-centered, vacuous, clueless old ladies you'll eve meet - and just as much so at the end of the book as they are at the beginning.

I have reached a whole new level of respect for professional book reviewers... zero. Seeing the glowing reviews of this steaming heap of feces is just pathetic. There. I think I'm done now. I felt I had to redeem my time, if even a little, by doing what I can to help steer as many people as I can away from this book.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars I have an excuse for finishing this book..., February 26, 2006
By 
This review is from: Loop Group (Hardcover)
...I was stuck on a long international flight with a flight magazine that hadn't been changed since my flight out, a movie I'd already seen (twice), and a dead battery on my mp3 player.
Otherwise, after the first chapter I'd have used it to wipe down the basin as a courtesy to the next passenger, then watched it disappear in a rush of blue water.

I don't know who these people who write the cover blurbs are, but I suspect that the publisher knows some very embarrassing secrets about them. And I know for sure that the reviewer who had the nerve to say this is McMurtry's best book since "Terms of Endearment" has never read that book, though he may have seen the pale shadow of a (critically acclaimed -hello-) movie that was made from it.

I'm thinkin' that Larry is dead and whomever found the body put together this book from the gleanings of his old notebooks and wastebasket contents.
Because that's what it seems like - a collection of vague ideas, impotent plot outlines, and blurry sketches of characters either too similar to ones used in previous novels (the chicken farmer aunt,for instance, is archetypical of McMurtry's crazy-like-foxes old codger Texans), or characters not fully fleshed out. The protagonist Maggie herself, never does get colored all the way in, so that you end the book with a "yeah, so?" feeling. You don't know or care any more about her by the last sentence than you did in the first. Too, the text is afflicted with cliche and overused adjectives. "Vast" is a favorite- it describes everything from pots of pasta to areas of desert. And there are many little inconsistences of the type that make me wonder if the editors were illiterate or apathetic. Probably both.

"Loop Group" is a huge disappointment. Please, if you want to read a McMurty book, try another: "All My Friends are Going to Be Strangers," "Lonesome Dove," or "Anything for Billy", or any of the other westerns. Perhaps "Terms of Endearment." Those are books that can change your life just because they make you know things you didn't know before.

Maybe the existence of this book is a perfect example of why creativity can't be motivated by contract obligations.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars That's why they make chocolate and vanilla, March 8, 2005
This review is from: Loop Group (Hardcover)
To each their own, but you do have to wonder.... all of the good reviews here come across as professional writing. Like professional payback or something. When you get down to regular people telling what they think of the story of depressed Maggie taking her wacky best friend Connie on a fun filled trip across California to Texas, it hits the mark.

If you had taken Larry McMurtry's name off of this book you would not have been able to convince me he actually wrote this drivel. You want to whack Maggie across the head and tell her to act her age or even like a mature 25 year old and get a life. Connie is so disagreeable I couldn't see how someone could be around her for two minutes much less be friends since sixth grade. This is a childish book about childish grown-ups and the only emotion it stirred up in me was the regret I wasted my time reading about two 60 year old wasting theirs.
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