ahnguyen

Anh Nguyen Nguyen من عند Chak Balaram, West Bengal, الهند من عند Chak Balaram, West Bengal, الهند

قارئ Anh Nguyen Nguyen من عند Chak Balaram, West Bengal, الهند

Anh Nguyen Nguyen من عند Chak Balaram, West Bengal, الهند

ahnguyen

قصة أخرى رائعة في السلسلة. أنا أستمتع حقا هذه!

ahnguyen

قراءة طفولة عظيمة أخرى. إذا لم تقرأ هذا بعد ، فأنت تعيش تحت صخرة. حكاية الحب المحببة بين العنكبوت والخنزير تبعث على الحزن حقا. فقط البخيل لا يمكنه الاستمتاع بهذا.

ahnguyen

Note that I will discuss major plot points in this book, including the end. If you have any intention of reading the book, don't read below. I'll simply say that I was very disappointed. I was very disappointed by this novel. Philip Roth does a good job of building the hopes of the reader that he will find a compelling and provocative conclusion to the events that begin with the election of Charles Lindbergh to the presidency. However, he fails to capitalize on them. As it turns out, things just get kind of scary for the Jews, but ultimately, their fears are unfounded. Or maybe they aren't; we'll never know because Lindbergh is spirited out of the book in a mysterious disappearance. Imagine, if you will, a story about a haunted house. Stories abound about the house and all its terrible ghouls and frights. Then our protagonist goes to the house and he hears some very scary sounds and begins to get nervous. Then he walks into a room and finds someone watching a horror movie and that's where the sounds are coming from. The End. Stupid, huh? That's how this book is. All bark and not even an attempt at a bite. All sizzle and the steak is just a picture in a magazine. Having said all this, Roth's concept is interesting. His proposals are very plausible, but Lindbergh is simply let off the hook too easily. I can understand why: even modern historians disagree about just how anti-Semitic Lindbergh was. Still, as Stephen Colbert might suggest, pick a side: we're at war. In the end, as I said, Lindbergh disappears. Roosevelt is elected for a nonconsecutive third term, the US is attacked by Japan, we enter World War II, and history pretty much rights itself. Maybe people who read this alternate history stuff like that; maybe the like to see relatively minor changes only to have things end up just as they really are. I don't. I wanted to see things get radically shaken up. Otherwise, what's the point? And that’s my opinion of this book. What’s the point?