Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good Stuff, but not Great, October 5, 2005
There's a lot of good stuff in this book. You already know the plot by now if you've read the other reviews -- skinhead decides to change his life and walks into the foundation offices of a Holocaust survivor. It's an interesting premise, and Prose does, I think, a good job with some of her characters. I really bought Bonnie as a single mom, particularly her relationship with her kids. I also found Meyer to be a great character, very conflicted about his own motivations.
What I didn't find so compelling: the ending was pretty contrived, in a way that tried to be too meta- about being contrived. I also was not really clear about Vincent's motivations until pretty far into the book.
On the other hand, let's face it, I've read a lot of "summer reading" crap this year and it's miles better than that stuff. So it's worth a look.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Prose but no Depth, April 29, 2006
When I read the concept of the novel, it sounded like an interesting read to me. But, after reading it, Prose's work left me with little emotion for the characters who (in my opinion) lacked depth.
From a self-claimed Neo-Nazi to a Jewish Holocaust survivor, the male characters do not seem to change, in my opinion, but rather stay dormant and stuck in their attitudes and life.
On one hand, we have Vincent Nolan (a Timothy McVeigh look-alike), who professes to be using the "World Brotherhood Watch" organization to help "save guys from becoming guys like me". He literally uses the premise of the organization to help him survive...they feed him, clothe him, etc. He is in need of a place to live, has no funds to find a place, and decides on a plan, whereby he convinces Maslow that he is trying to do good. He in turn gives Meyer Maslow (the founder and head of the organization, and a Holocaust survivor) the boost that is needed to help promote the organization, and to promote his latest book (which is not selling well). Nolan becomes the poster boy for Maslow's foundation.
Maslow convinces Maslow's assistant, Bonnie, to take Nolan in and give him a roof over his head. Bonnie has two children, and her family is rather dysfunctional. Maslow, himself, contorts the fact that he convinced Bonnie to take Nolan in, by stating to himself (over and over again), and to others, that Bonnie volunteered to take him in.
Maslow is using his Holocaust survivor experience to earn a living, literally, in my opinion. He is not really using the organization to help those in need, but uses any opportunity to promote his own image...that of being a man of honor, trust and a man who is trying to save the world, a person at a time. In actuality, he is extremely superficial, and is using the organization he founded to create himself as a figure of ethics and good values. He even questions his own motives for doing what he does, wondering if it is for the right reason. At one point he claims that material things do not matter to him, because he has experienced the worst of life without them, yet he is married, lives in a mansion, and dresses in Aramani suits (proudly). Nothing but the best for him.
One might assume that this novel is loosely based on Elie Wiesel, but, I see no similarities there, other than the fact that Wiesel survived the Holocaust.
For me, A Changed Man, could have been written with more in-depth characters, and characters of substance. The book had a lot of prose, but no depth.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
A botched attempt at a "good" thing, October 20, 2005
When I first read the premise for this novel, I hardly thought it was creative, (I have seen American History X), but decided to give it a chance anyway. Prose's writing is so unbelievable that I could hardly finish the first few chapters. She has no knowledge of what a thirty-something male ex-skinhead might be thinking, and it shows. Her use of slang is awkward and difficult to read, as are the passages of Vincent "looks too much like McVeigh" Nolan checking out Bonnie's "ass." This novel is forced and it screams it. Read something else.
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