Heartbreaking but Unbelievable
The book opens with Roman tucking his 6-year-old son in for the night. He then decides to leave the house, with his son in it, to go to a bar down the street for a quick drink. He’s gone about 15 minutes. When he returns, his son is missing.
Throughout the book we follow Roman on a remorseful journey. A journey of regret, sorrow, relationship problems, searching, and all those things that normally go with loss.
I really wanted to like this book and I did, I just didn’t love it. David Gilmour really has a way with words, and this really shines through. His mature prose was sometimes poetic, sparkled with some dark humour.
The major problem I had with this book was that every time Roman would dream, they would be in sequence. It’s like he planned it that way and he could do this at will. We don’t dream that way. I sometimes wish we did, because I have had dreams that I wish would continue the next time that I fell asleep. LOL!
I think with Gilmour’s talent, he could have done much more with this book. That said, this is the first David Gilmour book I have read, but I will definitely try another.
3/5
Note: If you have also reviewed this book, please feel free to post you link in the comments. I will then add it to the end of my review.
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I didn’t like it either when I read it. I felt like I should have liked it because it got so much praise but meh, I don’t even really remember how it ends. (I read it a couple of years ago.)
I want to read The Film Club, his newest.
Sassy,
I actually did like it, I just didn’t love it. I’m not suprised that you don’t remember how it ends, because it just wasn’t that memorable. I also want to read ‘The Film Club’.
I thought dream interpretation had become passe, something people still do for fun yet don’t take too serious. Why then do so many serious authors add in tedious dream segments? It’s a huge beef of mine.
I like the title though!
😀
Gautami,
I also found the title quite appealing.
I find books with dream sequences tend to be confusing and hard to follow.