From Publishers Weekly
Scathingly funny and surprisingly warm at heart, this midlife-crisis satire by German film writer/director Drrie (What Do You Want from Me?) skims the surface of contemporary life and comes up with a story rich in comedy and insight. German businessman Fred Kaufmann is a total bastard, and that's an understatement. He's 44, husband to attractive neat-freak Claudia, part-time lover to 25-year-old Spanish teacher Marisol and father to sullen, rebellious teenager Franka. Once he dreamed of becoming a film director, but long ago he joined Claudia in her health-food cafe business. His true occupations, however, are self-regard, self-pity and skirt-chasing. Credit is due the author for somehow making Fred likable, even sympathetic, despite his irksome flaws. An opportunity for enlightenment comes in a roundabout way: Claudia and Franka attend a Buddhist meditation retreat in France, and they return changed women. The latter has found love with a lama and begs her parents to let her go back to live with him. Fred offers to take Franka back to the retreat so he can meet the lama in person and eventually dissuade his daughter from her plans. Thoroughly skeptical of the Buddhist path to enlightenment, Fred surprisingly finds himself cleaving to the seekers at the retreat and doing a bit of seeking himself. Though Drrie's plot is predictable, it is redeemed by Fred's cynical, humorous narration, and his transformation from a boor into a sentient human being who finally learns manages to put others first from time to time.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Fred Kaufmann is a mediocre mess from Munich. He cheats on his wife, Claudia, who cheats on him right back while immersing herself in Buddhism. His 16-year-old daughter, Franka, barely tolerates him, and he is bored with his job as a successful co-owner (with Claudia) of a coffee and bagel franchise. So it makes perfect sense to take his sorry, out-of-shape 45-year-old self off to France with Franka in tow to deliver her into the loving arms of a Tibetan lama, eight years her senior. On their way to the Buddhist meditation center, they acquire smelly-footed Norbert, a pathetic soul who hitches a ride with the Kaufmanns after his wife and two kids dump him at the bistro where their paths had all crossed. Once at the center, Fred ends up rooming with Norbert and Theo, who is Claudia's lover. Fred has an unpleasant little sexual escapade with Theo's wife while insincerely participating in the ways of Buddha. When his unsurprising, tragedy-laced epiphany about the direction of his life finally occurs, it is so late in the story that the reader is hard-pressed to care. One wishes D rrie (Love, Pain, and the Whole Damn Thing) had used her considerable writing gifts to inject these run-of-the-mill, unsympathetic characters with some substance. A marginal purchase. Beth E. Andersen, Ann Arbor Dist. Lib., MI
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.