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41 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Far and away the best book I have read this year. Awsome.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
Sam Hall's kid is having to grow up on his own. His mother is a victim of a serious mental illness that renders her totally insubstantial as a parent and/or gaurdian--when she's not in the hospital. Sam Hall is the town vagabond--the kind of guy who lives on the edge, is constantly on the move, so immeresed in his own schemes and shennanigans he's hardly got time for his kid. As a result Sam's boy essentially raises himself and spends his time wondering how his parents ever got this way, while flip flopping form the "care" of one parent to the other.What makes this book work is that, flawed as the characters are, Russo nevertheless infuses them with the souls of real people. We can bemoan the fact that Sam's a lousy dad, and not that great a person overall, but it's hard to get too worked up about it as the fact is you kind of like the guy. In fact, this novel abounds in characters who are unsavory yet so brilliantly drawn and presented, we feel we know them well, warts and all. Additionally, Russo is a master at rendering the landscape of the small town, painting a picture that isn't all that attractive yet abounds in appealing context and situations--that is, he makes Mowhawk feel like home feels, regardless of where you grew up. In the end, what one is left with is a story--a rarity thses days. The novel is funny, sad, insiprational, gross and absorbing--in short, it's a lot like real life. What makes it an extraordinary story is that Russo pulls from it the extrordinary revelations about life, love, loyalty, stupidity, passion and loss that we ought to get out of our own lives but somehow don't. A truly remarkable book.
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A genuine American novel about genuine, realistic people,
By
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
Russo's first book, Mohawk, was beautifuly written with a realistic cast of characters, but I found that it was weighed down by a totally uninteresting and uninspiring plot.The Risk Pool takes the best elements of his first work, sprinkles in an even more colorful assortment of barflies and other sundry and sordid characters, and actually takes us on a sprawling journey of a son and his relationship with his hard-livin', hard-drinkin' father. Once again, Russo goes through great lengths to make his characters three-dimensional and genuine. He is a master of setting you right down in the bars, fishing holes, trailers, coldwater flats and smoking convertibles and getting you acquainted with Ned Hall and his father, Sam, and all their friends. He has a remarkable talent of making you feel as if you've known these guys for years. Russo also peppers these individuals with some fantastic, realistic dialogue that had me laughing out loud in places (especially when the fellas were discussing and debating the attempted suicide of a local resident). Russo makes no attempt to hide the many flaws in his characters; even the narrator, Ned, is a compulsive liar who seems to be an emotionally-detached observer and not a participant in his his own relationships with friends and lovers. His father, Sam, despite all of his problems (drinking, gambling, fighting, run-ins with the law, etc.), is made into a believably sympathetic character by Russo, and the author really captures that weird bond between a son and his father regardless of Sam's many, many negatives. Don't read this book looking for wacky hijinks or any profound insights into life, love or relationships. Thankfully, The Risk Pool never gets sappy or over romanticized like other parent-child novels. The book can be insightful and poetic at times, but that's not the main thrust of The Risk Pool. Take this book at face value like Russo does of his setting, characters and plot, and you'll be sure to love it. It's one of the best books I've read all year.
23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Risk Pool- you won't want to put it down,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
The Risk Pool is a stellar read. I greatly enjoyed it and would reccomend it to readers of all genres. For those not familiar with Russo's writing style, he cleverly combines the more serious moments in life with a wonderful sense of humor as is seen throughout this novel. There are so many wonderful examples of clever comedy in the book that to mention one would not suffice to say just how good it is. Russo has a strong command of tone in relation to the book's humor. Also, he provides us with many interesting and often unusual family situations- the character of Sam Hall (Ned's father) is most often at the center of such circumstances. Another wonderful facet to Russo's novel is his depiction of the make-believe Central New York town of Mohawk. It is as if the town is real- maybe even Russo's birthplace- that is how vivid and wonderful his imagery of Mohawk is. Nonetheless, such conclusions are for the rest of the reading public to decide- once again, it is truly a wonderful book.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Risk Pool-Best of Russo So Far,
By
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
With "Empire Falls" winning a Pulitzer Prize and being made into an HBO movie with a star-studded cast, it would be natural to assume that Empire Falls is the best book that Richard Russo has written yet. I tend to think that just as sometimes an Academy Award is given to an actor or director for a body of work rather than for their best work, Russo winning the Pulitzer falls into this same category. Empire Falls is very good, but Russo fans might argue that Nobody's Fool, Straight Man or Risk Pool might be even better.
Personally, I think Risk Pool is Russo's best book for three reasons. First, Sam Hall is the best main character in any Russo book to date (with Sully from Nobody's Fool being a close second). There is much to dislike about Sam Hall's actions and he'll never win any "Father of the Year" contests, but Russo somehow wins you over to liking Sam Hall and forgiving him (as his son, Ned Hall does) for his many sins. Second, Russo's greatest strength as a writer is in his minor characters and Risk Pool again has the most numerous and best developed cast of minor characters that add alot of richness to the book. Third, Risk Pool probably has the most mystery of any of Russo's other books, with numerous subplots and minor characters that do not always get neatly resolved. Unlike other of Russo's books, there is a little more room in Risk Pool for speculation as to what "might" have happened. Having seen "Nobody's Fool" already made into a solid Hollywood movie and "Empire Falls" made into an HBO movie, I am somewhat surprised that Risk Pool also has not received consideration for movie treatment.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Anywhere,
By "insectwings" (Cinti, OH) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
Mohawk, New York could be any small town in the United States. People out of jobs, bar dwellers, heart attacks...every town has them and no one likes to talk about them. This is, perhaps, one of the best novels I have read. Russo combines wit and dimension to his characters...so much that they become real. Ned Hall has the dull life of a boy living with his mother when his father interrupts everything. Told from Ned's point of view, he walks us through the simplicity of his father's drunken stupor to the complexity of his teenage feelings...and everywhere inbetween. The writing isn't filled with thesaurus words, rather words common people identify with everyday. All in all, this book shows the reader a life in the life of a young boy. Parents estranged and town falling apart. And it holds you in for the whole ride.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A true five stars,
By
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
This is one of my favorite 'literary fiction' books. I like all of Richard Russo's books a great deal, but this is perhaps my favorite. A very deep, very moving story about two men, a father and a son; the father's ex-wife, and a typical Russo supporting cast of small-town blue-collar types. It's not only about the father and son's relationship (or lack of one), but these characters practically leap off the pages (to use a literary reviewer's cliche), they're so well-developed. The father is a hard drinker/carouser of Olympian proportions, while the son tries to make sense out of his dad and win his affection.This is mostly a serious book, but there is some great humor in here too - it's just not remotely as out-and-out funny as 'Straight Man', nor as more subtly funny as 'Nobody's Fool'. I have no idea what the one reviewer was talking about when he said more than once that only the second half of this novel is good. The whole thing is great in my opinion.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Richard Russo rules!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
So you'll know where I'm coming from, I think I'm a pretty particular reader, lover of John Steinbeck and Ray Bradbury, to name a few, and not much for most of the popular fiction being written today. This is the second book written by Richard Russo that I've read, and he has joined my hit list of all-time favorites. I will read anything he writes, if they're all as good as this! Run, don't walk, to read this book!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic dialogue; poignant; entertaining,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
I have not enjoyed a novel like this in a long time. True, a long, sweeping saga, but masterfully executed. The characters are so real, so genuine, I often forgot I was reading at all...I was sitting at the bar, grinning myself at the witty dialogue. I've only read Straight Man by Russo, which was amusing, but I found this novel to have more substance. I especially like how the entire book is pulled together by Ned's grandfather's sarcastic version of the seasons: Fourth of July, Mohawk Fair, Eat the Bird, and Winter, which dictates the flow of life in Mohawk as well as the Hall "family". Russo has a knack for creating unusual yet memorable characters with wacky, poignant misadventures that stick with you for a long time.
12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A big story in the all the best ways. Loved it.,
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
After the slim tragedy of Mohawk, Richard Russo really exploded with Risk Pool. This is a long, satisfying, involved book covering the length of a relationship between father and son. It's populated by Russo's typical denim-collar roustabouts and academic escapees--a population with whom I doubt I'll ever tire. Personally I'm a huge fan of this kind of large, quasi-Dickensian fiction. It creates a world you can enter and enjoy for longer than just the day or three it takes to read most novels these days. This is more poignant than either Nobody's Fool or Straight Man, but I think it carries its weight/drama very well. And it left my wife in tears, so it's definitely got the power to grip you emotionally. I can't recommend highly enough.
14 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Two Books in One,
By
This review is from: The Risk Pool (Paperback)
There's no doubt in my mind that Richard Russo is the best author I've read this year. In the last three months, I've read everything he's published: laughed my you-know-what off at Straight Man, read Empire Falls through tears, enjoyed Nobody's Fool and scratched my head through The Whore's Child. That's the context for me saying this about Russo: Risk Pool is not his best.It's still worthwhile reading. Set in Mohawk Falls, Risk Pool is the story of a boy growing up into a man and trying to shake off the charismatic shadow of his shady father. More of a novel of ill manners than a novel of manners, Risk Pool is still reminiscent of those long English novels of the 18th and 19th centuries. It's funny, and the characters of this town are real and memorable. What bothered me about Risk Pool is that it seemed like two separate books. The first two thirds of the book is about Ned Hall's growing up years, and the last third is what happens after he leaves college to come back and witness his father's decline. I really enjoyed the first part of the book, which really captured the universal experience of being a powerless child buffeted about by events created by not-too-healthy adults. The last third, when Ned is a not-too-healthy adult himself, was more of a reading chore. I finished the book because I loved the child Ned had been, but the last third of the book could really have been written about another person altogether. If Russo was going to take us from the moment-to-moment attention he gave to Ned's childhood to this slapdash adulthood, I would have liked to read more about Ned's college years and what was formative there. |
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The Risk Pool by Richard Russo (Hardcover - September 12, 1988)
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