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Hardcover The Book of Joe Book

ISBN: 0385337418

ISBN13: 9780385337410

The Book of Joe

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Right after high school, Joe Goffman left sleepy Bush Falls, Connecticut and never looked back. Then he wrote a novel savaging everything in town, a novel that became a national bestseller and a huge... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Deserves 10 stars!

As a chick-lit fan and author, this book hit every requirement I look for in a book: a good story that flows and keeps me intrigued, an unlikely likeable character, sarcasm and wit, and the shedding of tears. If the back cover description doesn't suck you in, just start reading the first page. You won't be able to put it down. I locked myself away for two days so I could finish. The only bad part about this book was trying to find a new book that even came CLOSE to being as good once I was finished reading it. This book will really make you wonder just how much you really knew when you were a teenager, and what it would be like to really get back at people who burned you "way back when."

Bravo Jonathan Tropper!

Why I love this book: 1. This book made me laugh. Out loud. A lot. Much to the chagrin of the poor gentleman I was sitting next to on the flight to San Fran. I couldn't stop giggling and doing the silent-shaking-while-trying-to-contain-my-laughter laugh. 2. Despite all the laughter, it's the first book in several years that had me in tears at the end. Major, embarrassing "please don't look at me" tears. So worth it. I think I actually hugged the book at the when I finished the last page. 3. It was well written and totally engaging from page one. It's one of those books you remember in pictures, like you saw it taking place right in front of you, instead of text. I could go on and on, but I'm at work. Bottom line is, it's a great book, and I promptly bought his next one the same night I finished Book of Joe.

Twenty-five Stars!

Let's cut to the chase: Jonathan Tropper can flat out write. Whether he's going metaphorical, or descriptive, or setting you up to belly punch you with a zinger, this author has talent and a way with words that made my head spin. And Tropper's very witty, very moving, very effective prose is on full-scale display with his wonderful novel, THE BOOK OF JOE. Joe Goffman fled the very turbulent times of his teenage life in a small Connecticut town, then got even by writing a novel that bashed anyone and everyone for all the chaos and mayhem he experienced. To Joe's complete surprise, the novel became a runaway bestseller, than a major motion picture. But here's the problem: His father suffers a stroke, and slips into a coma; Joe goes back, after seventeen years, to his hometown, and suddenly he is face-to-face with the very people he disparaged. From an estranged older brother, to a former high school bully still determined to torment, to a grizzled old basketball coach still an icon in town, to an old sweetheart whose heart remains broken, Joe grapples with the ghosts of his past, and comes to a realization that maybe the problem with his little hometown rests within himself--and not its residents. This is a magnificent read, from its flowing prose to its compelling and definitive flashbacks of Joe's last year in Bush Falls High School. . .of his trials and tribulations with the three most important people in his life: Carly, Wayne, and Sammy. Tropper has absolutely triumphed in his ability to elicit the full gambit of emotions in the reader; I found myself laughing one moment, then wiping away a tear the next. The ending of this novel is incredibly poignant; Tropper creates and builds such an atmosphere the reader is completely absorbed, and overwhelmed with raw emotion. I see that Warner Brothers is developing THE BOOK OF JOE into a movie, and I can't wait. If they are able to reproduce even a fraction of the spirit of Tropper's book, the movie will be a blockbuster. --D. Mikels, Author, WALK-ON

Can you go home again?

Lately, the only books I write about are those that really beg me to write about them. Jonathan Tropper's The Book of Joe is one of those books.It's a safe bet that most of us use our past to fuel our present. Whether dreaming about the glory days or subconsciously trying to atone for things we've done wrong, we somehow define ourselves by who we were as much as who we are. Joe Goffman is a poster child for that definition.Joe, who has written a wildly successful work of fiction that pretty well trashed everybody in his small home town, is coerced into returning when his father, his only surviving parent, has a stroke. From Joe's less-than-warm reception through the rest of this engaging story, the events of the past provide a context for the searching, self-immolation and eventual re-discovery that comes from seeing if it's really possible to go home again, or if home belongs in the past, and is best left there.More than a little wry humor wraps Joe's recollections of hormone-filled high school days with the patina of cynicism that intervening years supply. That coating helps to keep the book from descending into the dark, regretful tone that could have marred its enjoyability. You'll laugh; you'll cry (I did).

What Happens When You Do Go Home Again?

A number of years ago, I was a teacher with student loans to pay, so I got a part time job at a deli. A former classmate, still wearing a jacket with his varsity basketball letter proudly showing for all to see, entered the store. The jacket no longer fit, his build had changed which age tends to do. I said hello and he gave me a look as if to say, "Why should I say hello to a pathetic loser like you?" He then made a comment about how little I accomplished since high school since I must only be slicing turkey breast and roast beef. I wanted to comment but wondered if it was worth it. Perhaps this is why I view Joe Goffman, the main character of THE BOOK OF JOE as almost heroic, as will anyone who felt excluded in high school.In THE BOOK OF JOE, author Jonathan Tropper challenges the expression made famous by Thomas Wolfe's novel of the same name "You Can't Go Home Again." There is no question that Tropper is indebted to Wolfe, retelling the story from a 2004 perspective, albeit with a more sensuous flair than Wolfe's novel. The novel's hero, or anti-hero, depending on the reader's perspective, is named Joe Goffman. Goffman is a successful novelist who wrote a book set in his hometown and based on events of his senior year in high school. The residents of the town look rather buffoonish, naturally take exception to the book and feel humiliated when the book is made into a film. Perhaps the fact that residents in the town know that the tragic events depicted in Goffman's novel are true, it makes matters worse. Eventually Joe has to return to his hometown when his father becomes ill and his reunion with the town's residents, particularly the venerated basketball coach and his players who regard the coach as a god, is at times comical and at other times tragic. Tropper could have succumbed to worn out clichés in the work, but instead masterfully tells the story of a writer who was once an alienated youth who has achieved literary success yet still has to achieve personal satisfaction. Complicated broken family relationships and friendships are explored but never completely solved. People Goffman truly cared about and hurt, either intentionally or unintentionally, reenter his life and he likewise has to deal with the very real pain he has caused. Goffman likewise has struggles with the image he has of his father and finds an unlikely friend and ally in his nephew Jared, perhaps the novel's most endearing character.Tropper deserves praise for the scope of what he has accomplished in this work. Many writers explores aspects of Tropper's book: returning home again, broken relationships, stigmas often attached to sexuality, complex family issues and the like, people constantly reliving the past, and do so well. Tropper is able to interweave all of these complicated issues into a novel that flows beautifully, captures a reader's attention, and holds it. He also describes the "writing life" rather well which I see as a plus.According to the book's jacket, i
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