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After You'd Gone (2002)

After You'd Gone (2002)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.98 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0142000329 (ISBN13: 9780142000328)
Language
English
Publisher
penguin books

About book After You'd Gone (2002)

Authors who love their characters too much – on the next Oprah.It happens to be a pet peeve of mine when authors seem to live out their narcissistic fantasies by creating mythically attractive characters who inspire desperate passion in all who see them. Aside from everything else, in my experience it’s completely unrealistic – women who are that universally attractive (and it’s a very narrow category) usually intimidate many, if not most, of the guys who would be chasing after them. Then there are the guys who retain some pride and are more calculated in their approach, even if the woman is that fabulously attractive. In this book, that didn’t exist – it was heartfelt passion expressed in full at first sight, by every guy who ever laid eyes on the main character. I also felt that Maggie was trying to have her main character, Alice, be too many different clichéd idealized heroines. The self-sacrificing martyr, willing to lose the man she loves because she knows that’s what’s best for him. The ice princess who keeps herself perpetually aloof as men drop at her feet like flies. The strong, passionate, rebellious adolescent courageously (and obnoxiously) defying her rigid mother. The unstable, depressed/suicidal, needy woman. The fact that Alice filled all these contradictory roles at different points in the book made it difficult for me to suspend my disbelief. I couldn’t decide whether this was actually an instance of complex characterization, where the main character is completely three-dimensional and has all these various sides to her, or whether Maggie was simply sloppy and inconsistent and had difficulty integrating the various images she wanted her main character to fulfill.Don’t get me wrong – really, this book should get at least four stars for readability alone. It was gripping, engaging, and certainly more complex (not to mention way better-written) than your average Harlequin. Unfortunately, the Harlequin moments did detract. They didn’t ruin the book for me, exactly, but the perfect romance got on my nerves. I wondered why John found Alice so consistently loveable over three years – I didn’t. I found their romance extremely one-dimensional, and ditto for Alice’s difficulty getting over it. Oh, perfect love! Oh, I will never get over this loss! Both love and grief are way more complex in real life than they were in this book. Loving relationships include difficult moments, not necessarily dramatic ones where an outside force is threatening the relationship, but regular everyday he’s-getting-on-my-nerves moments. And even when you’re truly grieving, I imagine there are moments where you have a little more of a grip on yourself and can be open to enjoying something or getting your act together, at least a little bit, even temporarily.So overall, if you’re looking for something very readable and engaging, not as superficial as a Harlequin but not overly challenging, and are willing to not think too critically, I would say pick this book up. But only if you can borrow it or buy it used at a discount.

‘The day she tried to kill herself, she realized winter was coming again.’Alice Raikes is a woman in love who has recently suffered a terrible tragedy. Alice travels to Scotland to see her sisters Kirsty and Beth, and almost immediately returns to London where she steps into the traffic and is taken to hospital in a coma.‘Life’s cruel like that – it gives you no clues.’What happened in Edinburgh that caused Alice to return to London? Was she hit by the car by accident, or was it a suicide attempt? Why would Alice want to commit suicide?The novel opens with Alice’s accident, and then circles back through her life to shed light on Alice, her mother and grandmother and others important in her life. The story as Alice’s life is suspended in a coma: her present is the focal point; her future is unknown; and her past is unpacked so that we readers – and her family members – can fit together all of the pieces of Alice’s life thus far.‘The tiny mathematics of human life.’As we make the journey through Alice’s life it becomes clear that there are parts of it not known to Alice herself. Alice’s mother holds a number of the keys, while her grandmother’s influence was also important. Events are related out of their chronological order and this requires us readers to be especially attentive in order to make sense of Alice’s life.‘What are you supposed to do with all the love you have for somebody if that person is no longer there?I enjoyed this novel although sometimes I found myself impatiently wanting to move beyond the past in order to know what would happen next. In short, I had become intrigued by Alice’s life and wanted to move more quickly to fit together the various pieces of it. This was the first novel written by Ms O’Farrell, and the third one that I’ve read. I’ve enjoyed each of them.Jennifer Cameron-Smith

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From the opening pages, it is clear that Alice is suffering from a double whammy of traumatic heartache but we don't know why. The novel unfolds in an interesting fashion of perspective changes and flashbacks, deftly handled, to reveal, piece by piece, the history, love story, secrets and tragedy that defines Alice and explains her emotional state and suicidal behaviour. O'Farrell's writing is superb. I was deeply drawn in. Alice is an intense, complex character that is rendered fully dimensional. I do, however, have a couple of niggling complaints about the novel that resulted in lowering it from a 5 to a 4 star rating: 1) There was some immature melodrama involved with the love story; it seemed jarringly out of place and irritating 2) I had to reread the first few pages and the last few to try to figure out what was happening. I understand that the beginning was meant to be mysterious, but it was the mechanics of how Alice saw what she saw that was so confusing--through a mirror on a hand dryer in a Superloo (large public washroom, I'm assuming), with two teenagers fooling around in the stalls. Even after finishing the novel, I wondered, how did Alice see what she saw? While the ending, in theory, was perfect for this novel, the way it was written threw me. But, overall, it was a good read and I will seek other titles by the author.
—Sandy

If I could give this book 4.5 stars, I would. It was a poignant tale with some of the most realistic description of the human condition this reader has ever seen. In O'Farrell's trademark style, the book jumps around in time and perspectives. In her other 2 novels (My Lover's Lover & The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox) the jumping around was not too distracting but in After You'd Gone I found myself having to read back sometimes to keep track of time frames and characters. It was a little more confusing this time. In addition, I thought this book was a little slower moving than her other works. I just wasn't really hooked right from the start. It took me until about the halfway point to really become captivated by the story. Despite these very minor flaws (IMHO), I still highly recommend this book to anyone who is a fan O'Farrell's work. It has a magical, haunting quality and a gritty, dark mood that you won't soon forget.
—Tara

NOT A REVIEW OF AFTER YOU'D GONE, WHICH WAS OKAY BUT WENT IN ONE EAR AND OUT THE OTHERI realise goodreads is for books but I found a piece of beautiful writing about the vain search for modern romance in a movie called Kissing Jessica Stein. The first part of this movie is all about a thirty-ish woman in New York who can't meet the right guy, fairly usual but quite funny too. Then it takes off in a different direction, which I'll refrain from commenting on or you'll raise your eyebrows, I know you will. Anyway the dvd contained some deleted scenes, and in those scenes I found this gem. Jessica our heroine has been seeing a guy for a week or so and he seems okay-ish but fairly aggravating, and by now what she really wants is for him to go far far away, but at that very point he announces that he thinks he's in love with her and that he's never felt so close to another person and that he feels they just click. So this is what Jessica says, and she says it all in a breathless rush at 60 miles an hour.Click? No. We do not click. You know we don't have one thing in common. We don't click in any way. We don't have chemistry or banter or common interests. You're a yoga instructor, you get colonics, you don'tappreciate the chaos and absurdity of life on this planet and in this city, you don't understand irony or eccentricity or poetry or the simple joy of being a regular at your diner on your block - I love that. You don't drink coffee or alcohol, you don't overeat orcry when you're alone, you don't understand sarcasm, you plod through life in a neat, colourless caffeine free dairy free conflict free banal self-possessed way. I'm bold and angry and tortured and tremendousand I notice when somebody has changed their hair parting or when somebody is wearing two distinctly different shades of black or when someone changes the natural timbre of their voice on the phone. I don'tgive out empty praise, I'm not complacent or well-adjusted. I can't spend 50 minutes breathing and stretching and getting in touch with myself, I can't even spend three minutes finishing an article. I checkmy phone machine nine times a day because I feel there's so much to do and fix and change in the world and I wonder every day if I'm making a difference and if I will ever express greatness or if I will remainforever paralysed by muddled madness inside my head. I've wept on every birthday I ever had because life is huge and fleeting and I hate certain people and certain shoes and I feel that life is terribly unfairand sometimes beautiful and wonderful and extraordinary and also numbing and horrifying and insurmountable and I hate myself a lot of the time but the rest of the time I adore myself. I adore my lifein this city, in this world that we live in, in this huge and wondrous bewildering brilliant horrible world. (Pause) In these ways I feel that we do not click.
—Paul Bryant

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