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Book Summary InformationAuthor: Amy Sohn Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2005-07-19 ISBN: 074323829X Number of pages: 336 Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Book Reviews of My Old ManBook Review: What's the Yiddish Word for "Waste of Paper"? Summary: 2 Stars
I finished this book last night and was left speechless by how awful it was. While I try to spend my free time reading more literary books, I love a good piece of tawdry chick lit, especially one with an arty old man and a twenty-something hipster. I guess I expected to be reading something similar to Banks's "Girl's Guide to Hunting and Fishing", but no. Sohn's book is a painful attempt to create a Jewish, Brooklyn-based Carrie Bradshaw. This book can't go four sentences without throwing in a Yiddish word, usually for no good reason. It's enough to make a girl meshugeneh! See what I did there? Perhaps Simon & Schuster will give ME a book deal.
Seriously, though, this book is poorly written, and none of the characters are in the least bit likeable (except Jasper). The book revolves heavily around Rachel's relationship with the aging screenwriter Powell, who seems to have no appeal at all except for his once-demonstrated ability to order a decent bottle of wine. He isn't funny, or interesting, or caring, or any other quality that might make him remotely appealing. He also has a very weird accent that phases in and out, which I think was supposed to create a more 'interesting' character, but mostly I found it distracting. Powell's shortcomings as a human being and a love interest are okay, however, because Rachel is almost as unlikeable, and therefore I didn't care if she met a nice guy or not. I also didn't care about her shoes, hairstyle, outfit, neighbor, career, or feelings.
I finished this book and felt angry. I don't usually get irrationally upset at my fiction, but this book got to me. I hated it for its name dropping, and its unsexy sex scenes, and its totally overwhelming portrayal of upper class New York Jews. Please do not waste your time with this book. Or, at least, don't spend money on it.
Summary of My Old ManFrom the New York Times bestselling author Amy Sohn, one of New York City's most provocative columnists, comes a hip, contemporary novel about sex, sin, and living in the same neighborhood as your parents. When twenty-six-year-old Rachel Block started rabbinical school, she didn't think she'd be dropping out after a semester and a half. But when a sick man dies under her counseling, she realizes she's not cut out for the rabbinate. To make ends meet, she takes a job as a bartender in her Brooklyn neighborhood--much to her parents' chagrin. It's the quintessential quarter-life crisis, compounded by the fact that she's still living just blocks from her childhood home. Then Rachel falls in love with Hank Powell, an iconoclastic screenwriter twice her age. Suddenly she's reassessing her values, her surroundings, and everything she's ever thought about the "right" kind of relationship. Meanwhile, her interactions with her father, with whom she's always been close, have become increasingly strange. Is he distraught that she's dropped out of school? Is he having his own, midlife, crisis? Something's up...and Rachel's increasingly convinced it might be her father's libido. With Rachel's own relationship getting wilder and weirder and her parents acting like teenagers, it seems that everyone in Cobble Hill is going crazy. A fresh spin on Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint, My Old Man is a black comedy about a dysfunctional Brooklyn family coming apart at the seams. In My Old Man, sex columnist Amy Sohn's second novel, protagonist Rachel Block is a rabbinical school dropout who takes a bartending job in her Brooklyn neighborhood where she picks up where she left off--counseling the sick, weary, and wasted. What begins as an amusing tale of self-deprecating soul-searching rapidly turns into a series of salacious sex scandals, adulterous encounters, and the occasional book club gathering for post-menopausal mothers. My Old Man essentially revolves around two congruent affairs, the first being Rachel's involvement with Hank Powell, a famous screenwriter old enough to be her father. The second affair actually involves Rachel's father, who is cheating on her mother with Liz, Rachel's upstairs neighbor and sex-obsessed best friend. As the novel progresses, Rachel's father strikes up a friendship with Hank, which leads to an odd doubles tennis match and a pasta lunch afterwards between this unlikely foursome. ("I didn't know which was more upsetting: that I was eating post-tennis lunch with my father, his mistress, and my fifty-one-year-old lover or that in the process my dad had discovered my penchant for being strung up to the ceiling.") However, once Rachel's mother stops folk dancing long enough to realize her husband isn't doing all those sit-ups for his health, the real drama starts and Rachel is forced to face the reality of her parents' crumbling marriage. While Sohn's observations of single life in the city (and the boroughs) are obviously witty and often make for engaging anecdotes, readers may find it difficult to sympathize with any of her relatively pathetic characters. However, lucky for us, Sohn's voice is appealing enough to keep readers engaged for most of the novel. --Gisele Toueg
United States Books
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