Mister Pip
by Lloyd Jones
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Read in September, 2007
(The entire full-length review can be found at the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com].)
So once again it's time for the Booker Prize, which for those who don't know is basically the British version of the Pulitzer, and in fact an award that a lot of people consider a lot more important than the Pulitzer, and a lot more indicative of the best that culture had to offer that particular year. And for those who don't know, only books that have been written and publishe...more
So once again it's time for the Booker Prize, which for those who don't know is basically the British version of the Pulitzer, and in fact an award that a lot of people consider a lot more important than the Pulitzer, and a lot more indicative of the best that culture had to offer that particular year. And for those who don't know, only books that have been written and publishe...more
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Read in October, 2007
This is when two and a half stars would be handy. I really couldn't stand this book for a couple of reasons when I first started reading it. It has a narrative voice that sounds like an oldish adult trying to sound like a five year old. Jones writes in staccato sentences that are occasionally poetic but more often tend toward a voice I will refer to as Tragic Deadpan, a voice that was also used to disastrous effect in Octavia Butler's writing. It is uniquely unenlightening on the plight of the P...more
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Read in November, 2007
From what I know, you can order this book on Amazon but it's not readily available in the U.S. just yet - and that's a shame. I picked it up in my favorite Dublin bookstore not too long ago at the suggestion of the owner. He said it was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, basically the British equivalent to the Pulitzer. The book is written by a New Zealand author (Lloyd James) and is set on a politically tumultuous South Pacific island. I won't give away too many plot details, but James digs ...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
people who like children
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in October, 2007
I had a hard time deciding whether to give this three or four stars. I decided four because ultimately the book had my complete attention for its 250 pages. That doesn't happen as often as I'd like. I also think the writing is well above average. Jones's writing has some great lines and overall it flows very well. I also really liked the play with Great Expectations. The story itself is touching and shed some light on Bougainville's atrocious early 1990s. It's a great look at ...more
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Read in September, 2007
On an unnamed tropical island, war disrupts the lives of young Matilda and she classmates. When almost all of the whites living on her island, including the school teachers, flee the conflict, only the reclusive Mr. Watts remains. Married to a local girl, Mr. Watts takes over schooling the island's children. However, lacking any curriculum or experience, his teaching revolves around reading aloud from Dickens' Great Expectations. The kids are enthralled, despite having no real understanding o...more
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Read in January, 2008
"You cannot pretend to read a book. Your eyes will give you away. So will your breating. A person entranced by a book simply forgets to breath. The house can catch alight and a reader deep in a book will not look up until the wallpaper is in flames." Well, this quote from the book reprinted on the jacket is why I bought it. Also, the clerk told me that it was shortlisted for the Booker, which is the British empire equivalent of the Pulitzer. Nothing better than a book about the transfo...more
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Read in November, 2007
um.. it's a nice little book about the power of literature. "poignant" comes to mind, but my initial reaction, upon finishing the book, was disappointment.. maybe all the booker prize hype gave me irrational expectations? i let it marinate for a day or two and i can honestly say i'm haunted by it, and want to re-read it. I didn't love it, but I can't quite seem to let it go either.
A good 2/3s of the way in, the book struck me as simplistic, but lovely. Then, with no warning, uns...more
A good 2/3s of the way in, the book struck me as simplistic, but lovely. Then, with no warning, uns...more
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Read in September, 2007
I loved this booker shortlisted novel. I was attracted to it because I absolutely love Great Expectations - I have read it four times, and although not a particular fan of Dickens (though I did read them all) I really love GE. Fans of GE will love the passages in which Mr Watts celebrates and brings to life the world of GE, allowing his pupils a relationship with Pip. The novel takes a brutal turn however, as the reality of war in the 1990's comes to the village. This is a story about the power ...more
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Read in February, 2008
I got this book for Christmas when I was in New Zealand. It's won the Commonwealth Writers Award, and listed for the Booker Prize. This a heart wretching story of a fictional tropical island in the midst of a war. We never are told what kind of war other than most people have fled to nearby Australia or New Zealand. Periodically the island is invaded by both rebels and terrorists. The few people left , several children included are without services, schools etc. One lone white man is asked to te...more
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Read in May, 2008
The Pacific island of Bougainville is in the grip of Civil unrest, half the population left before the blockade, including the teachers. It is left to Mr Watts, the only white man on the island to open up the school again and teach the few things he knows, with the help of the local mothers and a copy of Dickens' "Great Expectations".
This is the story of "the greatest novel by the greatest writing of the nineteenth century" and how it affects a classroom of Pacific islan...more
This is the story of "the greatest novel by the greatest writing of the nineteenth century" and how it affects a classroom of Pacific islan...more
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Read in February, 2008
i love charles dickens; the reason i even glanced at this book at the library.
why do men write from little girls' perspectives? do men think they get it? and vice versa of course. it's weird and doesnt always sit well with me.
but this character could just as easily been a boy. you dont even know what she looks like...probably because she doesnt know either...no mirrors. you dont even know where this community is except near australia. so for that reason is a little fairy tale-esque. youre ju...more
why do men write from little girls' perspectives? do men think they get it? and vice versa of course. it's weird and doesnt always sit well with me.
but this character could just as easily been a boy. you dont even know what she looks like...probably because she doesnt know either...no mirrors. you dont even know where this community is except near australia. so for that reason is a little fairy tale-esque. youre ju...more
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Read in February, 2008
There are many people who feel this book is extraordinary. I'm not one of them. I will agree that the prose is often very beautiful, and that the character of Mr. Watts (aka Pop Eye or Mr. Pip) is an intriguing one. But I could never fully engage with this story. Perhaps it's because I knew from page one that, with the backdrop of war, this novel would have a violent and tragic ending, and I dreaded it. So I suppose I never let myself really "bond" with the characters in preparati...more
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Read in March, 2008
It is the story of Matilda, a little girl who lives in a tropical island near Australia, where civil war rages. Being innocent and helpless, Matilda and the children persistently attended school taught by the only white man in the island, Mr. Watts.
Through the eyes of their heathen teacher, who hold Charles Dickens' Great Expectations as his bible, these kids sought another world outsight their village. Beyond the constant come and go visits of the rebels or the government troops...
Jones' ...more
Through the eyes of their heathen teacher, who hold Charles Dickens' Great Expectations as his bible, these kids sought another world outsight their village. Beyond the constant come and go visits of the rebels or the government troops...
Jones' ...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
Grandma
I really got into this one. Pop Eye, a white man living in Papa New Guinea, uses Great Expectations to reach out to a community of island natives in the middle of a messy civil war. At first, I was expecting the usual load of rubbish: Kids neglected; Man reads Great Literature; Kids all Fall Down and Kiss Man's Ass. In places, that's what it sounded like. But once I got comfortable with the story and the diction (Jones' narrator, Matilda, likes to repeat "us kids" every page or ...more
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Read in January, 2008
Thirteen-year-old Matilda lives on a Pacific island in the midst of war. There is little comfort and no escape for the village in which she lives.
Mr. Watts, the only white man on the island, decides to change that for the village's children. He becomes their makeshift teacher and introduces them to literature. Each day he reads a chapter of Great Expectations to them. Matilda and her classmates are quickly enthralled. Matilda uses the book and her own relationship to Pip as an escape not onl...more
Mr. Watts, the only white man on the island, decides to change that for the village's children. He becomes their makeshift teacher and introduces them to literature. Each day he reads a chapter of Great Expectations to them. Matilda and her classmates are quickly enthralled. Matilda uses the book and her own relationship to Pip as an escape not onl...more
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Read in December, 2007
A well-written book, good narrative. I think what I enjoyed the most was how Lloyd Jones consistently gave examples of how the location and moment in time you read a book in really does affect how you absorb it, and how it impacts your life or connects with you. I do love books that seem to offer some commentary on the act of reading itself. That said, I felt like the end was a little bit sensationalistic - which is not to say it lacked emotional heft, because I was certainly gripped, it just...more
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Read in April, 2008
What a fascinating and unforgettable book. It is about so much more than the transformative power of literature. Or perhaps it extends that concept/theme farther than I have experienced before. I like the way Matilda, in the end, grew beyond the power of Pip and Great Expectations - how she processed Dickens saw him as a fallible man (as were all the important characters - her mother, Mr. Watt) and was empowered in a new way. I am reminded of a book review I recently read in which the author w...more
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Read in August, 2007
Beautifully written, compelling and in a way it is brutal.
The story told from a point of view of a young Papuan (New guinea) girl who found a joy of reading and understanding life through Charles Dickens' Great Expectation. The teacher, a white man, who introduced her and her class mates to the English author shaped her world and her life. Before reading this book, I would not have imagined that Pip in Great Expectation could influence anyone who lives remotely from the Western culture. But ho...more
The story told from a point of view of a young Papuan (New guinea) girl who found a joy of reading and understanding life through Charles Dickens' Great Expectation. The teacher, a white man, who introduced her and her class mates to the English author shaped her world and her life. Before reading this book, I would not have imagined that Pip in Great Expectation could influence anyone who lives remotely from the Western culture. But ho...more
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Read in February, 2008
An oddly moving and compelling book that one reads with an incresing sense of foreboding. On the surface this is a coming of age tale for a 13 year old girl, but this is no ordinary tale as the girl lives in a vulnerable village on a Pacific island torn by a vicious civil war. Her story becomes bound with the character of Pip from Great Expectations, which is read to the children by the reclusive last white person in the village. It's great affirmation of the power and inspiration of literature ...more
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