- Hardcover
- Publisher: Viking NY; 1St Edition edition (1991)
- ASIN: B002668LCA
- Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
- Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Why Read Very Old Bones?,
By A Customer
This review is from: Very Old Bones (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
I have read Very Old Bones and thought that the theme is true to life. Many people look at their ancestors to discover something of themselves. I found the narration interesting using Orson Purcell, the illegimate child of Peter Phelan to portray the Phelan family. I have also read Ironweed and found that some of my questions about protagonist Francis Phelan (in Ironweed) answered or more informative anyway. Enjoyed both books. I love Kennedy's style.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is a fantastic book,
By nickpai@hotmail.com (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Very Old Bones (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
William Kennedy is one of America's best living writers. This is far away his best book. Although it shares characters and events with other books in Kennedy's 'Albany Series', its not necessary to have read any of Kennedy's previous work to enjoy Very Old Bones. Kennedy's greatest skill is in his dialogue. He allows his characters to speak for themselves, rather than mouth his own intentions. As a result, his work gives wonderful insight into one family, one city, and one point in time. Despite the fact that his most recent work, The Flaming Corsage, was a waste of paper, Kennedy will one day be the deserving winner of a Nobel Prize. After reading Very Old Bones go back and read the jury's commentary on the Nobel Prize given to John Steinbeck. Their words could just as easily been written about Kennedy. His is a fine American voice.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Maybe I'm missing something?,
By
This review is from: Very Old Bones (Contemporary American Fiction) (Paperback)
I picked up "Very Old Bones" at a book sale, based on the back cover blurb. Having finished the book, I can't say it really had much to do with that blurb. To be fair, this is the first of Kennedy's books I've read, so perhaps there's some back story I'm missing. I found it to have rich character development, the kind that evolves as one reads about the actions of a character. Building the characters in that way is more satisfying to me as a reader than constant description and enumeration of a character. I appreciate that an author lets me figure these things out on my own. To me, the characters were the most interesting part of the read, and kept me plowing through a storyline that didn't hold my interest that much.For one thing, at times that narrator's voice seemed to break down. I was confused on occasion, as it seemed to shift from the third person through Orson's eyes to some indeterminate character. Maybe that was my own fault, reading on a bus full of teenagers, but nonetheless it jarred my reading of the narrative. I found the ending somewhat anti-climactic. All this buildup for this? Maybe if I re-read the book in a different setting, I'd have appreciated it more. After all, sometimes life is full of drama and struggle, and ends up to be anticlimactic. Perhaps this is the true brilliance of the book?
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