The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
My rating:
didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing
add to my books

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

3.81 of 5 stars 3.81  ·  rating details  ·  52,883 ratings  ·  8,928 reviews
This is the long-awaited first novel from one of the most original and memorable writers working today. Things have never been easy for Oscar, a sweet but disastrously overweight, lovesick Dominican ghetto nerd. From his home in New Jersey, where he lives with his old-world mother and rebellious sister, Oscar dreams of becoming the Dominican J. R. R. Tolkien and, most of a...more
Hardcover, Large Print, 465 pages
Published February 6th 2008 by Thorndike Press (first published January 9th 2001)
There is a good chance some of your friends read this book. Sign in to see!
sign in »

Friend Reviews

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists. Add this book to your favorite list »

Community Reviews

(showing 1-30 of 80,173)
filter  |  sort: default (?)  |  rating details
Cameron
How this book won the Pulitzer Prize AND the National Book Critics Circle is beyond me. It's terrible. Here's the review I wrote when it came out. I stand by this completely. If someone says they read this and liked it, punch them in the throat. (I'm kidding, naturally.)

Review of Junot Diaz’s first novel, “The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao,” published Oct. 7, 2007
Imagine, if you will, that seven years after publishing "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber," Er...more
David Abrams
Meet Oscar de Leon, dubbed "Oscar Wao" by bullies who liken him to the foppish Oscar Wilde. Our Oscar is a fat, virginal Dominican-American teenager who carries a Planet of the Apes lunchbox to school, spends hours painting his Dungeons & Dragons miniatures, and who knows "more about the Marvel Universe than Stan Lee." If Nerd was a country, Oscar would be its undisputed king. Oscar is the kind of kid—sweaty, mumbles to himself, inevitably invades personal space, probably has...more
Andy
I bought Oscar Wao as a birthday gift for my mother in October based on scores of sterling reviews. She read it, gave it a mild thumbs-up (probably just being nice) and handed it off to me. Now having read it, I'm pretty mortified I thought this book would be something she might like.

The critical consensus seemed to be that Junot Diaz is a good writer, and he picked a good story to tell here in his first novel. But I found this book lacking on both counts. I found the writing lazy a...more
Malbadeen
I want to know all about your family, your childhood, your grandparents, their childhood, etc, etc, I want to know where you lived, what food you ate, what games you played or didn't play. I want to know why this is important to you or that is not. Which is why I LOVED this book! Junot Diaz takes 300+ pages to tell a story about a boy that wants to be kissed and the kiss MATTERS because we know his family, we know his friends, we know their superstitions and their pains, and their loses and thei...more
Kim
TBWLOOW would have been a ‘good read’, I honestly believe that, but I don't know… something happened along the way.

Maybe it was the fact that I started this during the holidays, and that's not fair to any book, I'm the biggest wench from November 15th to January 15th. I should limit my reading to People magazine or maybe some old Three's Company scripts... I don't know, I haven't figured out the system just yet.

Maybe it was my utter lack of knowledge about the political...more
Alfonso
Ok, I’m writing a review of this book right now or I’ma die trying goddamn it!
1 HOUR LATER

I got nothing! I’ve deleted like 20 paragraphs!

1 HOUR LATER!!! 2 bruises in my forehead, kind of dizzy, I’ve cursed the gods of knowledge for being born without literary talent!! And 0 review!


Oh god!!! I give up!!! This is all I got!!! This book is awesome!!! Is a nerdy dude being nerdy as hell and not getting pussy!! Even tho he desperately wants it!! he wa...more
Dan
Soon after I started reading this book, I also started reading Housekeeping vs. The Dirt by Nick Hornby. In it's preface, Hornby discusses why reading has fallen by the wayside as of late. A lot of people associate reading with boredom because to most, it feels like a chore to get through novels. If people would just read what they enjoyed, then they would begin again to see the pleasures of reading and thus, do more of it (he even makes a point that someone who reads only The Economist and thei...more
Erin F. B.
How do I start this review...ok first I will say that I recognize the literary abilities of Junot Diaz. The book is well-written; the language hypnotic in fact. This book, for all the things that bothered me, is hard to put down.

So, the one star rating is more of a reaction to the emotional upheaval this book left me with. I just can't get behind a book so completely misogynistic. And I don't know the author's intent, and I'm afraid I don't know nearly enough about Dominican hist...more
Patrick
Patrick rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: People who don't think they'd like the story of an immigrant family's journey to the states
Recommended to Patrick by: Kevin Waterman
Hype can really change the way you perceive a book. Although the buzz for 'The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao' has been steadily building since it was released almost a year ago, the book I picked up at the bookstore had a big, gold starburst attached to it reading 'WINNER - 2008 Pulitzer Prize', and had been brandished 'THE BEST BOOK I EVER READ' by no less authority than my friend Kevin right here on this very website.

It's almost not fair, the way we build up these books, or mov...more
David
I enjoyed this book a lot, and think it deserves the good reviews it's received. I just hadn't expected it to be quite as *sad* as it was. Somehow, it wasn't the more obviously depressing aspects (e.g. the persecution and torture that were routinely practiced under the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic) that got to me so much as the smaller stuff. The continued failure of the various members of Oscar's family to connect, the accumulated hostility between generations, as well as th...more
Mike
Just got a hold of this, and am very excited...

...and devoured it, in a couple days. First, I was a fan of _Drown_, Diaz' collection (now 10 years old), particularly for its ability to define and then to defy the painful events narrated. One of the stories is a masterpiece about two boys who kind of back into a homosexual encounter, and then move on without really grappling with the experience, and it's always struck me as generous, funny, moving -- just a model for precise languag...more
Mariel
Mariel rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: I fell in love again
Recommended to Mariel by: footnote historians. Foot like Achilles
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao spoke my language of self consciousness. The parts of yourself that you wish weren't there and cannot forget about. They could perch on your shoulder like not so polar opposites of shame and pride. Maybe not spoken fluently but we could get by and have a nice conversation about all the good stuff like families, books, musics, hopes and disappointments. I liked being talked to. It means a lot to me to be able to use my own heart and mind and feel something abo...more
Jason
Jason rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Dominicans, Americans, Dominican-Americans
Recommended to Jason by: Susan Clearfield
A lot of people seem to either hate or love this book. Most people get irritated with misleading title, the hard-to-follow narration/storyline, but mostly with the eclectic use of spanglish that is scattered throughout the book and with no footnote, i might add!!!

In an interview, Junot Diaz said that he offered up the Spanish without translation because he wanted to give English readers an idea of the immigrant experience. The spanish in this book reflects the immigrant experienc...more
Sandi
"The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao" really gets 4-1/2 stars from me. However, I wouldn't recommend it to anyone who likes a linear story, a well-defined plot, and easily comprehensible English. Probably the hardest thing to do when reading this book is not trying to translate all the Spanish in it. Trying to translate just slows you down and keeps you from really feeling the rhythm of the text. Fortunately, I have lived in Southern California my whole life and have studied a lit...more
Beth F.
If bad language and graphic (not hot) sexual descriptions throw you into a moral tizzy, don’t read this book, even though it did win the Pullitzer. But for people who can look past that and reach the conclusion that foul language and a course description of life doesn’t have to be gratuitous, read it. There’s an excellent chance this book will be unlike anything else you’ve ever read.

In one sentence, this book is about Oscar de Leon, an ultra nerd who can’t get laid but really, r...more
Debbie
I am not finished yet, but I am really loving this book. What a voice, what lyrical, amazing language. He is truly gifted.

OK, I read it.

I cannot help but be influenced by our country's current talk about illegal immigrants, which has led to public discourse about immigrants in general. It is a talk that, to many, risks cold analysis, and for some, resentment, anger. So, given this backdrop, I personally cannot help but see this book as primarily an immigrant saga with ...more
Michael
There was a lot about this novel that I liked, and a lot that I disliked. I know from other reviews that what -I- got out of the book was quite different than what other people got out of it.

The biggest feeling I had was anger that our world does this to people (Oscar, that is). It shames me. Call me a dreamer if you wish, but I think that if we treated our fellow man better, and didn't ridicule him or her for no good purpose, all of us would be better for it. Maybe more kids would e...more
zan
I might be controversial by giving this book only 3 stars, but it didn't click with me the way I expected it to based on the universal "Wao" it got from everyone else. All those Mordor references felt forced, and I felt a bit attacked as a reader rather than invited. Anyone else want to join in my dissent?
Gus  Sanchez
I knew kids like Oscar Wao. In fact, I was Oscar Wao, an overweight, extremely nerdy kid whose lifelong ambition was to simply be cool. And so much of what Oscar Wao endures - and, more often not, through his own hand - is hilariously and uncomfortably familiar to me.

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is a genius work from Junot Diaz, who emerged a decade ago in a blaze of glory after the publication of his debut collection of short stories, Drown. That rare voice that speaks of t...more
Roy
This book is a true wonder and treasure, the very definition of a 5 star read. I'm placing it in the exhalted position of one of my 3 favorite books of all time, sitting alongside The World According to Garp and Love in the Time of Cholera. It is a magnificent chronicle of a Dominican-American family and the fuku that haunts them throughout generations, with its main focus on poor Oscar, a heavyset nerd personified in eternal search for love, preferably the variety that is accompanied by sex. ...more
Bart
Bart rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Readers willing to take the good with the not-so-good in pursuit of excellent American fiction
This book falls just shy of exceptional – which is not to write that it doesn’t have exceptional parts. It has plenty of exceptional parts, actually. Trouble is, very few of them concern the book’s protagonist and namesake; and despite being called The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao few of the book’s wondrous parts have anything to do with Oscar Wao.

This book won most of last year’s literary awards. That may or may not be overstating its worth. Ever since “The Brief Wondrous Li...more
Abby
This book was kind of disappointing. It had a lot of pages. I'd have to go check to see how many for sure, but only about 83 of them were actually necessary for the story. The rest of it was just filler swear words and phrases in Spanish that I didn't understand. Oh yeah, also references to nerdy things that I've never heard of, like fantasy movies and famous sci fi books. (Because I of course, am the epitome of not-nerdy.)

The whole book swore and swore and swore like a swearing sail...more
Gregory Baird
“I did all I could and it still wasn’t enough.”

“You really want to know what being an X-Man feels like? Just be a smart bookish boy of color in a contemporary U.S. ghetto. Mamma mia! Like having bat wings or a pair of tentacles growing out of your chest.”

Meet Oscar de León. Once upon a time, in elementary school, Oscar was a slick Dominican kid who seemed to have a typical life ahead of him. Then, around the time he hit puberty, Oscar gained a whole lot of weight, ...more
Myfanwy
Oh boy, is The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao an interesting, challenging, illuminating book. At first, I wondered if I would be at a disadvantage as I do not get most of the allusions to comic books (though the Tolkien, etc, is not lost on me)--still knowing these things is not necessary to find what you need in this book. I also initially worried over the footnotes--would they be a chore? Would I end up skipping them? Nope and nope. From the beginning, I looked forward to them and what they ...more
Jessica
Jessica rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: bilingual tolkienheads?
Junot Diaz's swearing annoys me. Remember that guy in high school who smoked all the time, chainsmoked even, had been smoking since he was eleven, but it always just seemed really awkward and fake, like he was doing it to look cool or something, he didn't really enjoy smoking, and it didn't look right? Diaz swears like that guy smokes. It's fucking annoying.

I found the swearing in the first few pages of this novel distracting. However, I've been waiting for this book to come out for ...more
RandomAnthony
You know those books that remind you why you like reading so much? The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is one of those books. Diaz’ whip-smart writing and brilliant characterizations pulsed on the page and his integration of Dominican history (which could have dragged this book down big-time) melded with Oscar’s story as naturally as if (and I suppose Diaz would say they are) one. You have to fight through some of the thickets of the intertwining plots but the effort is worthwhile. Did it d...more
Mark
While reading the book, I felt as if someone had taken Toni Morrison, Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Jonathan Lethem in a blender and this book is the result. Diaz is so self-consciously arty and post-modern in his writing style that I was constantly distracted. This is not necessarily a bad thing. After all, Thomas Pynchon is self-consciously arty and Kurt Vonnegut injected himself into his own stories all the time. The difference is that Pynchon and Vonnegut had stories to tell. Diaz doesn't...more
Emily
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
James
James rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Anyone interested in Hispanic American literature
My problem with the book is how tired a lot of its themes feel and how flippant it is about history. It could very well be that we're supposed to treat the narrator as unreliable and by extension scorn his juvenile view of Trujillo's dictatorship. But if that's the case, it's hard for me to read anything else in the book without a little bit of scorn and annoyance. The other side is that maybe all the comic book and sci-fi allusions were meant to make the whole experience of history seem a bi...more
Trin
An incredibly fascinating if flawed book, which I'm so glad I read but which makes me sad, because I think it could have been so much more than it was. Diaz is obviously an immensely talented writer (I hear his short story collection, Drown, is phenomenal, and really want to read it now); he weaves together the story of Oscar, an overweight, somewhat hopeless geek living in New York, with that of the rest of his family and the history of the Dominican Republic. I know (knew) next to nothing abo...more
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 2672 2673
topics  posts  views  last activity   
Mongoose 12 107 Dec 07, 2011 10:55am  
A 2012 Challenge:...: Dominican Republic 2 13 Nov 18, 2011 11:16pm  
Junot Diaz Suggested Discussion Topics! 3 65 Oct 11, 2011 12:40pm  
Shrinking Violet ...: October Discussion 1 3 Sep 14, 2011 06:29pm  
What two mystical figures does Oscar Wao see when he is beaten? 2 52 May 03, 2011 11:44am  
Dominican Republic 1 17 Sep 16, 2009 02:06pm  
Expectations 1 13 Dec 08, 2008 12:55pm  
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Hardcover)
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Paperback)
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Paperback)
The Brief And Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao
The Brief Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao (Paperback)

Readers Also Enjoyed

Drown

Share This Book

Your website
Pin It
“It's never the changes we want that change everything.” 100 people liked it
“Success, after all, loves a witness, but failure can't exist without one.” 78 people liked it
More quotes…

The Next Best Book Club
The Next Best Book Club
8328 members
last activity 17 minutes ago
shelf: read
Amazon Kindle
Amazon Kindle
4478 members
last activity 1 hour, 42 min ago
shelf: read
Constant Reader
Constant Reader
2867 members
last activity 10 minutes ago
shelf: read