Reviews

Un Plan Sencillo by Scott Smith

divinesprout's review against another edition

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dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

kastnc's review against another edition

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2.0

There were a lot of good themes in this book, the power of money, relationships between brothers, bad decisions, and their chain of events. I just didn’t find it that suspenseful and got pretty bored.

mayflower828's review against another edition

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challenging dark tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

3.5

bbboeken's review against another edition

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2.0

Dit leest zo vlot als een filmscript, maar helaas ook met dezelfde diepgang. Het is nochtans een interessant gegeven, maar totaal niet uitgediept. Pas op de laatste vier bladzijden is er enige diepgang merkbaar, die een glimps geeft van wat het boek had kunnen zijn. Vergelijk dit met bijvoorbeeld Patricia Highsmith, en dan verdwijnt het verhaal van Smith in het niets. Jammer, het was een interssante synopsis.

Misschien is de film beter? Hij heeft in elk geval voldoende sterren bij imdb, en een veelbelovende cast en regisseur.

garrodot's review against another edition

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3.0

A great thriller that draws you right in. If the characters weren't painted so well as utterly sad and normal, then this book would fail, as it all hinges on believing their choices as each new horrendous thing befalls them when the titular plan falls to shambles. If you've read the synopsis (or seen the great film adaptation) it's not much of a spoiler to learn that these characters have to do things that should be unthinkable to keep the money as things spiral out of control, and the author does a great job capturing the anguish of the lead character's thoughts as he deals with it all. And much like Hank becomes obsessed with trying to figure out when exactly was the turning point for his life to get this messed up, it's difficult to pinpoint exactly when we stop seeing where he's coming from and start to dislike the character he ends up being.

All of the above is praise, but the ending really soured me. Maybe I was expecting too much from the author. Having hooked me so effortlessly, I was expecting something too grand, I suppose.

lakecake's review against another edition

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4.0

I'm giving this 4 stars in the sense that it was a really good book, not in the sense that I really liked it. I was actually physically ill after reading this book--it's so terrible, the things that happen, and it's so depressing how it all ends up. But that was obviously where Smith was going with the story, so 4 stars in that he did his job really well.

emilyreadsitall's review against another edition

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dark fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

justdavid3113's review against another edition

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3.0

When backed in to corners like these, it's difficult to imagine your response.

Hank was weak, in my opinion. He let those around him make the decisions when he thought it was him all along.

I did enjoy this book, definitely makes you think.......it's not a position I ever wish to be in though.

boopsnooter's review against another edition

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dark emotional reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

In the middle of “A Simple Plan,” Jacob explains to his brother Hank that one can’t be happy without being rich. 
“Mom and Dad were never rich.” Hank retorts.
“And they were never happy.” Jacob replies matter-of-factly.
The moment reveals this darker than black crime fable to be something more, knottier and more elusive than at first it appears.

So what does it appear to be? “A Simple Plan” is a crime thriller about regular people in a surprising situation. The entirety of the book is narrated from the perspective of Hank Mitchell, a man who finds 4.4 million dollars in a duffel bag in a downed plane alongside his brother and his brother’s friend. What follows is so procedural, so step-by-step that nothing escapes the readers’ gaze. Scott Smith has constructed most critical scenes of the novel to be so intimate that the reader will want to tap out—the pain inflicted is always noticed, the wrongs committed are all documented, the reader will know everything in a way not dissimilar to a God.

It is appropriate, then, that Hank’s narration is indistinguishable in tone from a confession. Being confessed to immediately reminds the reader that they are in fact, not God. We’re people, people like Hank. Which is the other, painfully obvious reason why “A Simple Plan” is so thorny; Hank being the protagonist makes it so that we understand Hank, and even harder, are automatically going through the motions that he is taking. More than once I caught myself imagining a horrible action and then immediately began distancing myself from it—this isn’t real, he did that, he is fictional—not realizing at the time that I was still mimicking Hank’s processes by trying to psychically remove myself from the situation.  It almost seems upsetting enough to suggest that it’s not worth the effort to take the money (or read the book for that matter).

But the hook is too good. 4.4 million dollars is life changing money to most people, and Scott Smith knows most people want their lives changed. The regular world presented inside “A Simple Plan” is suffocating beneath blankets of snow that Hank has to drive through every day to eke out a living as an accountant at feed store. At one point in the story Hank admits that his career trajectory would land him (in the distant future) the position of owner of said feed store—and that admission is too much to bear. Jacob reminds Hank that their parents didn’t steal 4.4 million dollars and they were miserable. Surviving doesn’t feel like winning. Is it too much to want to win?

In case the capitalism metaphor was too subtle, at one point Hank, his wife Sarah and his brother Jacob play monopoly with a packet of the money they stole. What starts out as an exciting way to spice up the game fades almost immediately and what is left is the doldrums of having to play monopoly. “A Simple Plan” might as well take place on a monopoly board. The characters want the game to mean something, to reclaim the old farm, to travel the world, but they’re still going around the board.

And having an awful time of it, too. Plenty of bad things happen over the course of the novel, and Scott Smith is invested in how  those things happen. One of the profound and unsettling ideas presented is that two people can together form an emotional bureaucracy that stalls and sidelines humanity so that it won’t get in the way of making an omelette, for which you had to break a few eggs (read: people). Not since Macbeth has a marriage been so openly destructive to the people in proximity of the happy couple. More than once Smith expects you to feel a healthy dose of Schadenfreude for a pair of people that definitely earned the coal they are receiving in their proverbial stockings.

Of course, we are not God, and enjoyment of punishments well-dealt vanish as we realize they are effectively meted out to us as well, since Scott Smith has no interest in cutting away from our Heroes’ suffering. Eventually he must, for all books end, but in the conclusion Smith delivers the final blow. In the final paragraph he clarifies that “A Simple Plan” is a tragedy. The way off the board is caring about something, anything but money, even if it’s just a memory of your brother, dressed up and trying to impress you, wanting you to love him.


cecemariet's review against another edition

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dark sad tense slow-paced

2.0