Reviews

The Lemon Table: Stories by Julian Barnes

dllh's review against another edition

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4.0

Lots of really lovely prose, often about pretty unpleasant things. Barnes confronts aging with a variety of treatments. You'd think such a collection would start to feel a little one-note, but it didn't. Will read again.

thomasgoddard's review against another edition

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4.0

Got told that I'd love Barnes and I wasn't disappointed.

This is a fantastic collection of short stories that revolve around the themes of old age and death. That's pretty standard for me. I'm bound to love a collection if it's about mortality.

The stories are smart, sharp and dry-humoured.

His writing is a little old-guard, so his characters are quite repugnant. Just watch out for that if you're not a fan of realism. Me... I like characters that feel real. Warts and all.

I think more collections like this should exist. Picking a theme and really digging into it is hugely rewarding for a reader. A novel tackles a theme from a few perspectives, maybe. But so many short stories mean that you're tackling it from so many different directions that you get this sense of pace and clarity.

And, of course, they bump into each other in your brain. It forms connections. Relationships.

Best stories:

✒️ A Short History Of Hairdressing
✒️ Hygiene
✒️ Knowing French

There's a lot of skill demonstrated here. Highly recommended.

margotrizzi's review against another edition

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2.0

The second story in here is soooo good I wrote down so many quotes. A lot of the rest of them just went over my head I think.

schgro's review against another edition

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funny lighthearted reflective fast-paced

2.0

sseug's review against another edition

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5.0

Intellectually commendable

1umbrella1's review against another edition

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2.0

boooooooooooooring

marthaos's review against another edition

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3.0

This book of short stories by Julian Barnes was both entertaining and mildly melancholic. Barnes has a way of writing about death, with gravitas and insight, but also with levity and humour. Such was the writing in “Levels of Life” and “The Sense of an Ending”.

These stories were written from various voices, some female, some male, mostly English, but also American and European; but the common thread seemed to be people who were aging. As such, questions of mortality, illness and death prevailed, and if not always blatantly addressed, lurked darkly overhead. The tone was overwhelmingly middle class, and there was much attention given to food, another theme that linked the stories.

However I felt that the author’s voice was too present in these stories, and the stories themselves were too similar to one another to make a satisfying collection. Read independently of one another, they are all strong stories, but read as part of a collection, none really stood out for me. Even the clever “Knowing French”, where the fictional protagonist addresses Barnes, the author in a series of letters, failed to stand apart as an excellent piece, despite its clever premise. The theme, voice and tone was too similar to the other stories to endure in lasting memory, in my opinion.

Overall this collection was very readable. The writing, as always, was distinguished and stylish. Each story was incisive and well crafted. However, I would have really liked to see more variety within the collection, I would have liked Barnes to tackle the subject of aging from far more wide-ranging voices and backgrounds and to venture outside of his comfort zone as I think this would have made for a more exciting read and stand-out stories that persist for longer.

picopoinesse's review against another edition

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emotional reflective slow-paced

3.0

whogivesabook's review against another edition

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4.0

Got told that I'd love Barnes and I wasn't disappointed.

This is a fantastic collection of short stories that revolve around the themes of old age and death. That's pretty standard for me. I'm bound to love a collection if it's about mortality.

The stories are smart, sharp and dry-humoured.

His writing is a little old-guard, so his characters are quite repugnant. Just watch out for that if you're not a fan of realism. Me... I like characters that feel real. Warts and all.

I think more collections like this should exist. Picking a theme and really digging into it is hugely rewarding for a reader. A novel tackles a theme from a few perspectives, maybe. But so many short stories mean that you're tackling it from so many different directions that you get this sense of pace and clarity.

And, of course, they bump into each other in your brain. It forms connections. Relationships.

Best stories:

✒️ A Short History Of Hairdressing
✒️ Hygiene
✒️ Knowing French

There's a lot of skill demonstrated here. Highly recommended.

rysiaczek's review against another edition

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4.0

Nie przepadam za opowiadaniami. Tym razem jednak Barnes mnie kupił - już wiem, że opowiadania kończące się śmiercią są idealne.