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Paperback Off for the Sweet Hereafter Book

ISBN: 080503756X

ISBN13: 9780805037562

Off for the Sweet Hereafter

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

The second installment in the Neely trilogy, which opens with a preposterously long sentence and goes downhill from there. Sex, gunplay, exhumed corpses. Something for everybody. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Poignant and hilarious

This is a book that makes you want to wrestle people to the ground so you can read it outloud to them. In my mind the narrator always sounds like Arlo Guthrie doing Alice's Restraunt. From the page-and-a-half-long opening sentence, Pearson rambles in a seemingly aimless manner that belies the method in his madness. Even the rambling tale of Mrs. Askew's woes with her front gutters leads back to the horse-faced gunman in the turd-colored jacket. Seamless, this is American fiction at its best.

A Good Yarn

I read this a few years ago because I thought it was a different book. It was a happy accident. Pearson has an original style. His book flows with very little punctuation like the mind of someone on his fifth cup of coffee. He writes of southern life as a southerner. He can poke fun, but it's in good fun. He cares about his characters, and because of that we do too. This book is at times hilarious, at times dark, at times touching. I disagree with the review that said this book has no plot. There's plenty of plot here. Much of it just happens inside the characters.

The novel William Faulkner would write were he alive today

I once had nothing to read except a copy of SWEET HEREAFTER someone left at my place. My pre-reading attitude was "okay, little book, I'll read you tonight until I can get a new GOOD book tomorrow." Needless to say, I finished SWEET HEREAFTER before moving on to something else. Mr. Pearson is, well, hilarious. He has a clear perception of his fellow human beings, so when he describes us and our behavior and our thoughts, he doesn't need to embellish or exaggerate to get the reader to laugh out loud - after all, we all do pretty freaking funny stuff every day. Another plus is Pearson's characters - they are incredibly well developed and 3 dimensional. Readers will almost surely come to love just about every person populating this book, in some way or another. One reviewer here calls this the "worst book" ever and says it lacks a plot. I compare Pearson to Faulkner for 2 HUGE reasons: like Faulkner, Pearson writes of everyday, rural, Southerners, and like Faulkner, Pearson is a master of the un-ending, rambling, gambling, juking & jangling sentence. (Both writers use periods sparingly, but are liberal with their dashes, commas, and colons.) Such a writing style does take more focus to get used to than 99.999% of other novelists' "normal" styles. Having spent all my life in either the South or the Midwest, I state flat out that rural Americans tend to be extremely relaxed when telling a story or relating events they are familiar with (either first-hand or via gossip), so they tell their tales in a slow, meandering way with plenty of digressions for bits completely unrelated to the story at hand, but fascinating nonetheless. Like Faulkner, Pearson is a master of presenting just this sort of narrative, and there will always be those who demand a super-slick, fast paced plot with no diversions, and they'll want that done in 6 to 9 word sentences. Such readers will most likely dislike the works of Pearson & Faulkner intensely, but for those of you who are open to a writing style as unique as they come, you will undoubtedly enjoy SWEET HEREAFTER immensely, for all the joy and laughs it gives you. That next morning, when I had planned to go buy another book to read instead of SWEET HEREAFTER, I still went to the bookstore. I bought copies of 2 other Pearson books, because even though I was only about 120 pages into SWEET HEREAFTER, I knew I'd want to read more Pearson.

Highly rewarding for language lovers

Pearson plays with language and plot like a baby plays with food. The result is big fun. Think Gertrude Stein channeling Garrison Keillor. Wild, dense, rich and homey.

Poignant and hilarious.

This is a book that makes you want to wrestle people to the ground so you can read it outloud to them. In my mind the narrator always sounds like Arlo Guthrie doing Alice's Restraunt. From the page-and-a-half-long opening sentence, Pearson rambles in a seemingly aimless manner that belies the method in his madness. Seamless, this is American fiction at its best.
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