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72 of 80 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Sad but Beautiful Story!, February 23, 2010
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The Solitude of Prime Numbers is a quiet but poignant coming of age story about two lonely misfits: Alice Della Rocca and Mattia Balossino. The story begins in 1983 and ends in 2007.
Alice is pushed by her overbearing father at a young age to become a world-class skier, but a serious skiing accident,in the Italian alps, leaves her scarred and with a permanent limp. She desperately wants to fit in, but she is taunted by other classmates, engages in self loathing behavior, and, as a result, detests her father for the life she seems faced with.
Mattia is a twin, while he is brilliant, his twin sister Michela is damaged: "his brain seemed to be a perfect machine, in the same mysterious way that his sisters was so defective". Despite this the twins are placed in the same class at school, and Mattia finds himself constantly trying to shelter his sister from the taunting and the laughter of other students. He is forced by his parents to take his sister everywhere. When an incident occurs for which Mattia feels responsible, his life becomes full of guilt, and self loathing behavior as well. In high school he is sent to a new school, and the teachers are not sure how to handle the gifted, but socially withdrawn Mattia.
Alice tries to befriend Mattia, and is attracted to him. When she learns that he is a genius, she asks him if he likes to study. His reply is: "It's the only thing I know how to do." (He wanted to tell her that he liked to study because you can do it alone, because all the things you study are already dead, cold and chewed over). Needless to say, for Alice and Mattia the high school years had further scarred these two individuals who felt rejected by the world. "They had formed a defective and asymmetrical friendship, made up of long absences and much silence, a clean and empty space where both could come back to breathe when the walls of the school became too close for them to ignore the feeling of suffocation."
Taking separate paths after high school, Mattia, a brilliant mathematician, goes off to the university. The two reconnect off and on. Mattia summed it all up by saying he and Alice were "twin primes" alone and lost, "close but not close enough to really touch each other ---lonely individuals forever linked but separated."
MY THOUGHTS -- I loved this book. Not only is a debut novel, written by a physicist, it was first written in Italian, and beautifully translated to English. The story is told in short, alternating chapters, and it drew me in from the very first page. The characters are damaged and sympathetic. It is a beautiful story which shows just how a traumatic childhood can scar us for life. It's a story of missed opportunities, and one that I will not easily forget. The ending surprised me, and I look forward to more books by this talented author. READ THIS BOOK!
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"One" isn't the loneliest number..., April 24, 2010
"I'm never alone, I'm alone all the time..."
Gavin Rossdale's aforementioned popular lyric from 90's rock band "Bush" describes this novel best, as his words resonated throughout my skull while devouring this tale of damaged, yet unmistakeably interesting beings.
Most of us have experienced awkward and/or embarrassing situations in our youth; whether it be rejection by a potential suitor for the first time, striking out in an important little league baseball game, or performing actions that one would not normally acquiesce to for the sole purpose of "fitting in". However, some of these situations can be so grim and cavernous that it permanently affects our psyche, or in some instances, our physicality. Paolo Giordano's novel "The Solitude of Prime Numbers" is a fantastic yet melancholy examination of these very scars of our youth projected into adulthood.
Alice is an awkward little girl, forced into scenarios and activities by her upscale father that ultimately leave her physically altered and emotionally detached from her family. With a strong yearning for living a normal life, she goes to extreme lengths to be normal again, eventually giving rise to disorders to which she has little control over. Mattia represents the prodigy with a beautiful mind, but his twin sister Michela has a mental handicap which proves to be his childhood Achilles. The abandonment of his sister in the park to attend a birthday party without the embarrassment of her usual antics causes a deep fear and regret, from which Mattia's genius mind never fully recovers. Eventually, the odd pair cross paths and become frequent acquaintances. While living their lives separately, they continuously are linked to one another and find comfort in the opposite's hidden predicaments to which each never fully grasp.
The characters surrounding Alice and Mattia are both destructive and rehabilitative, and equally as fascinating. From siblings, parents and teenage cliques to friends with alternative lifestyles and potential mates, each of the characters represent a definitive slice of Alice and Mattia's internal evolution or stagnation. Some of them come and go as swift as a breeze, others remain concretely in their lives but never quite understand the damage both have withstood.
Prime numbers, are in essence, a positive integer divisible only by itself and the number "one" (i.e. 11 and 13 are prime numbers). Paolo Giordano's novel relates this mathematical interpretation to human life: Some of us carry the bricks of past experiences that eventually build an invisible wall with enough voids to view and live life, but thick enough that one never quite touches the adjacent. The circumstances unfolding are open to the reader's interpretation, although eluding to several paths. While attempting to lightly tread on the essential broken foundation of humans not living a "normal" life, Giordano conveys that sometimes we love, sometimes we leave, and sometimes we remain, but ultimately the gaps between prime numbers are impossible to be traversed.
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Need a book club book?, April 25, 2010
This review is geared for people considering this for a book club selection.
A few reasons why I recommend this book for book club:
1) Nobody had heard of it or had already read it when I suggested this novel--not always an easy thing.
2) It is fairly long but was a quick read (I read it in a few hours). So, when we met everyone had read the book and held a strong opinion about it.
3) Though you could read it quickly, the book is very character-driven and thus yielded rich conversation. Most of us agreed that while the characters were not so likeable, they portrayed familiar people and were intriguing for the decisions they made. Other than the In addition to the characters, there was a lot to talk about with regard to literary devices and style--the prime number analogy alone could take up half the discussion. In the end, most of us felt it was 3-4 stars and worth the read.
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