Romantic Comedy by Curtis Sittenfeld
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
BOOKCLUB PEEPS DON’T READ!
“A third child inspired in me more gratitude for my own circumstances than envy.”
“’If it sounds like I haven’t been in enough therapy, it’s because I’ve chosen Midwestern repression instead.’”
“’The point of life is to find the thing you’re good at and enjoy doing, and to do it for other people.’”
“’Real life is just awkward.’”
Romantic Comedy is about Sally who is a writer for a comedy sketch show. She has been writing sketches for years. She has had varying levels of success and some recurring sketches. On one show they have this musician named Noah Brewster who also acts as the host. He has been singing for years as well. Noah is described as very attractive with a good body. They meet, collaborate on a sketch, and then go to a bar with everyone for an after-party. They talk but that is where they part ways. A couple of years later the pandemic hits and Sally gets an email from Noah. They conversate. Is this real life or a romantic comedy? Will Sally think of herself as worthy? Will a relationship develop? Is Sally worthy of Noah?
Curtis Sittenfeld wrote this book while watching SNL on one screen and a generic romantic comedy on another during the height of Covid, it seems. I mean I don’t know that but that is the way it came across. The first thing I noticed when reading the jacket was the fact that it was an exact copy of SNL. Like couldn’t you move the show date to a Friday or not have the name be three letters? Alter it a little bit. Then the script that was presented as a movie was like a total rip-off of The First Wives Club. I didn’t like Sally as the main character. She was very whiny and insecure. She did some things that I didn’t understand and couldn’t fathom having a reason for. Her ex-husband was an ass. I also didn’t like how the book was arranged. There were like 3 chapters total and 1 was entirely made up of emails. That took up a lot of space without a lot of words. Emailing multiple times a day? Within a few minutes? I was surprisingly thrown when the font changed from the email chapter to the next chapter. It was weird. One thing I did like was the sprinkling in of commentary on the unraveling of our Democracy into Autocracy because of the 2016 election. They were nods to reality and something I felt deeply about and agreed with. “’Remember on election night, when it was like, the worse could happen? And then all of a sudden, it was like, Oh my fucking God, it’s happening. And then it had happened.’” Oh and the author lives in Minneapolis…where I am from! And there was mention of Duluth, MN as well as hot dishes…such a Minnesotan thing! There was also a very sweet moment about Jerry and a guitar. Noah was described as very hot with a great body so maybe a movie version with a hot guy could lift this story? The words that I picked up on when I came across them were vacuous, anodyne, axiomatic, piquant, facile, cloying, epistolary, and obsequiousness. I was not impressed with this book and thought it was generic and bland. It was frustrating and stupid. This is exactly the type of book that an alien could read and understand all romantic comedies ever.
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Tag: pandemic
Sleepwalking Through Life and Other Disasters To Wake Up The World
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Station Eleven is a tale about multiple characters and a pandemic that wiped out an untold amount of people here on the planet. It jumps between moments in time and locations. I actually liked how this was done. Sometimes, when authors choose this path, it can be confusing and annoying but, in this case, it heightened the suspense and investment in the story. I felt like I was taken by the hand and brought along for the journey as I was experiencing everything firsthand. I did like Miranda a lot as she seemed chill and had an approach to life like “well this is how it is”. The author drops these little nuggets of foreshadowing that creates an ominous read which drew me in and I was hooked by page 25. I have always like disaster or survival stories and this one fits the bill wonderfully. I loved how Star Trek was mentioned at several points and a key phrase as the mantra of one group. I am a huge Star Trek nerd and it made me smile. Emily St. John Mandel does an amazing job of connecting people and events. She weaves a history and connectedness between things that is brilliant. There was a scene where a snow globe gets described but then also all the people and steps it took to make it, including truck drivers and people that package the globe. The way she also points out explicitly and aptly what life was like before and how humans interacted with the world was perfection. The depth and brilliance are lyrical. There was a description of friendship with respect to expectations and the work needed that really resonated with me. I was immersed in the world and enveloped by the prose. As one character put it, were they (are we?) just sleepwalking through life with our jobs, life, and what counts for happiness? Clark mused on in his past how he would take redeyes from NYC to LA and marvel at the sun rising as “the world was waking up.” Maybe, the world does really need to wake up and this is what took it to happen. Overall, this was a superbly written novel that brings forth all the feels and is so strongly rooted in possible reality to make it scarily relatable.
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