Reviews

A Possible Life: A Novel in Five Parts by Sebastian Faulks

clemmi's review against another edition

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3.0

I'd like to give this 3 and 1/2 stars but I dont think it will let me. I really like the central presence of connectedness and the small ways in which this occurs in the different stories in this book. I know some people love his writing style, but I actually found it a little clunky in some of this book. But it got me thinking about our actions and our connections with others, and has stayed with me for several days after finishing it so that's always good in a book. I'll definitely seek out more of his writing now, this being my first novel of his.

cook_memorial_public_library's review against another edition

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3.0

Recommended by Connie

Check our catalog: http://encore.cooklib.org/iii/encore/search/C__Spossible%20life%20faulks__Orightresult__U1?lang=eng&suite=pearl

promaroy's review against another edition

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5.0

I thought the little stories of people's lives were great. I really like stories which don't try to force a happy ending; which these mini paintings really don't. I would probably read these again.

Read on my way back from London after getting from the WHSmith at KGX.

bookswithboo's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging emotional reflective

3.5

issy_horner's review

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emotional reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.25

melc's review against another edition

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4.0

Five subtly interwoven stories make up this book about how our choices affect the path of our lives for better or worse. Beautifully crafted, more a work of art than a novel.

kkop12's review against another edition

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3.0

So I didn't love this, nor did I dislike this book. So a three star seemed fitting. Some of the short stories interested me more than others. But I didn't really get the point of the five stories. I know there is some link among them and the title, but I struggled with it. One thing I did like was the author's sudtle introduction of characters or settings from one short story into another. I would read other books by Faulks because he comes so highly recommended, but if I had just picked up this book off a shelf I don't think I'd be seeking him out again.

robgreig's review against another edition

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challenging emotional mysterious reflective medium-paced

4.25

whatbritreads's review against another edition

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3.0

Honestly, this was a two star read for me but the last story redeemed it a tiny bit.

nomadreader's review against another edition

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4.0

(originally published at http://nomadreader.blogspot.com)

The basicsA Possible Life: A Novel in Five Parts tells the life story of five characters: Geoffrey, a World War I soldier; Billy, a poor boy in Victorian London; Elena, a scientist in futuristic Europe; Jeanne, an orphan in rural France in the 1800s; and Anya, an American folk singer in the 1970s.

My thoughts: A Possible Life is a fascinating, gripping read. Each of the five parts could work on its own, although some are better than others. Taken together, however, they do become a novel of sorts as Faulks poses giant questions about life and humanity.

The novel begins with Geoffrey's story. I was amazed at the depth of detail Faulks infused into his 79 pages. The reader sees Geoffrey's life, and it was an amazing one. His life, and the lives of the other characters are all amazing. They share a particular kind of amazing, however. Faulks is concerned with those moments small and large that change our course in life. Each story contains numerous points where I wondered "what if?"

As mesmerizing as these characters are, particularly Geoffrey, Billy and Elena, I was enchanted by Faulks' writing: "All the time I worked and read, I didn't expect it would lead to anything. I read because I was interested. I learned to live in my imagination." He achieved the voice of these characters across time and the world while still maintaining a distinctive narrative voice that helps bring the five stories together.

As I read this book, I found myself having to read it in pieces. I wanted time between the stories to ponder. Although Geoffrey's story is perhaps my favorite, my appreciation for the novel as a whole kept growing as I read the first three tales. I found Elena's future-set story particularly intriguing. Faulks managed to tell historical and futuristic stories in a cohesive way. The story of Jeanne fell a little flat for me. The initial set-up was fascinating, and it had thematic ties to the previous ones, but it didn't engage me as deeply. Sadly, the last story of Anya failed to interest me. It was a disappointing ending to an otherwise strong novel. Initially, it dampened my enthusiasm for the novel, but I've come back to being so impressed with the other parts of the book to forgive Faulks for the Anya piece and praise the book as a whole.

Favorite passage: "She wonders if when she awakes, she will feel as mystified as she feels now; or whether the hard edges of fact, of history, of her own past--of every cell that makes her what she is--are in truth as flexible as time itself."

The verdict: A Possible Life is a novel concerned with the number of possibilities of life. It addresses the small and large moments that make us who we are. Faulks explores circumstances large and small in these five people at different times and places in history. It's a novel that will make you ponder the pivotal moments of your own life. A Possible Life isn't a perfect novel, but it does have moments of perfection. Its flaws, however, appear in the last two stories that didn't measure up to the brilliance of the first three.

Rating: 4.5 out of 5