Share for friends:

Four Letters Of Love (2006)

Four Letters of Love (2006)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.79 of 5 Votes: 5
Your rating
ISBN
0330352695 (ISBN13: 9780330352697)
Language
English
Publisher
picador usa

About book Four Letters Of Love (2006)

This is one of my all time favorite novels. It has everything we could ever want in a story. It’s difficult to describe the feeling we get reading this book because it’s rich and overwhelming at times. Like eating too much cake, or looking at a gorgeous painting or sculpture. There is just too much beauty.It’s a very Irish story, written by someone in love with the landscape and its people. Niall Williams knows his subject inside out and I think that’s why we fall deeply into the centre of this book.This is the story of two families, the Gores and Coughlans. William Coughlan comes home one day and announces God has spoken to him and he’s going to quit his job and paint. To this end he goes to the West, where he tries to capture the light on his canvas. What follows is the unraveling of his relationship with his wife and son Nicholas. A slow dissolution into depression and anguish as he relentlessly pursues art and his family relentlessly pursues him.The second storyline is of Muiris Gore. Tragedy follows his family. His son is a musical prodigy who out of the blue has a fit and is left lame and mute. Isabel, his bright sensitive daughter bears the weight of her family expectations and guilt over her brother’s illness.There is so much Irish angst and such sweet sorrow in the telling of these two stories. Pathos and melancholy, not in a depressing way but in a way that makes us think that is entirely feasible that this kind of story belongs to real people.In the end we are filled with hope and resolution as both families come together in love and hope and a future.If you read nothing else, read this novel.Once I finished this one, and recovered, I read all his novels.”As it is in Heaven”, “The Fall of Light”, ”Only say the word”, ”Boy in the World”, “Boy and Man”.”John”.They are superb, great books, great reads.

I really wanted to like this book, but I think it's just not my style. His writing is definitely beautiful, but to me it felt like too much description and not enough plot. There was almost no dialogue through the whole book. And I have to admit, after finishing it, I just don't get it. I'm not even sure how it really ended since the ending was written almost entirely in poetry rather than in clear language. I hate to give it only 2 stars because his words really are beautiful and lyrical, so I think for someone who loves words and word images, this would be a great book. I, however, look for something different in a book. I want character development, relationships, interesting and creative plots, and progress towards a goal. I like to walk away feeling like I've learned something, rather than just feeling like I've enjoyed reading beautiful words. Mostly, I love to read a book that makes me feel like I've stepped in to that character's world for just a little while, like I'm experiencing their life, and I didn't feel that with these characters, partly because I didn't understand what they were feeling. So it wasn't that this was a bad book, it just wasn't a book that I personally enjoyed. It's the difference between what an English major would enjoy and what a science and math minded person like myself would enjoy.

Do You like book Four Letters Of Love (2006)?

When I was twelve years old God spoke to my father for the first time. God didn’t say much. He told my father to be a painter, and left it at that,This is Niall Williams first book. I read it after enjoying The History of the Rain. Niall Williams is also a painter, and a poet. Common themes through the stories he writes. He paints the images with words and evokes feeling and imagery and sense of place. I gave this four stars as I found that while the language and writing were so well done, the story, which is essentially a love story, seems quite tragic. I am not sure if it is an Irish thing, but the older generation in the story see love as a tragedy, not something to be pursued and celebrated. Well worth the read though but Rain was better. I guess all writers mature with each book they write.
—Tanya

The epigraph to this book is Ovid's 'Lovers pave the way with letters.' It's a great pity we don't write love letters much any more (love emails and love texts just don't have the same alliterative ring nor can they 'pave the way', with such promise)... but this is a marvellous, lyrically-written, magical book about love, by a man. Why am I surprised? Because most men aren't brave enough to write about love with such honesty and yearning and a sense of the mystical. But this man is an Irishman and this book is proof that the Irish sensibility allows a man to write about love like an angel. I remember synaesthetic scenes: words becoming ribbons and music becoming veils of colour. Throughout the book Williams suggests that love is a kind of mystical madness, a kind of heartsickness, a soulfully troubling matter that must be borne with hope and then the rewards will come, eventually. It tells us that to love is to find oneself and that love is a spiritual quest. Beautiful.
—Angela Young

This book was a quick read for me. And while I took away the message that love is the whole purpose of a life well lived and that to die without loving is such a shame, I couldn't truly immerse myself in this book. Perhaps it was too short, perhaps I just didn't get to know the characters that well.My most memorable quote:"As I write this to you, there are about 4.5 billion people on this planet and I read about a very interesting study done by a popular scientist who calculated roughly 105 billion people have lived on our planet in total since the time Homo Sapiens came into existence. And obviously every single one of them had to pack up and leave when their time was up, so death is not something that happened only to Julie, or would happen in due course to me. It happens daily so there's no big deal about it.The point is with death as the common denominator and with belief, religion, profession, wealth, time, place, era, and countless other differentiators in those billions of lives, only those who had the courage to live their dreams for whatever time they were here, had solace in their heart at the time of crossing over, at the time of finishing the journey and going into the unknown.You can take pride in the fact that your parents lived that kind of life, so rejoice son, for there is no reason to feel sad."A definite 3 star rating all the same.
—Briget mazzetta

download or read online

Read Online

Write Review

(Review will shown on site after approval)

Other books by author Niall Williams

Other books in category Fiction