The Silver Linings Playbook

The Silver Linings Playbook

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4.04 of 5 stars 4.04  ·  rating details  ·  28,891 ratings  ·  4,359 reviews
Pat Peoples has a theory that his life is actually a movie produced by God, and that his God-given mission in life is to become emotionally literate, whereupon God will ensure a happy ending - which, for Pat, means the return of his estranged wife Nikki, from whom he's currently having some 'apart time.' It might not come as any surprise to learn that Pat has spent several...more
Paperback, 289 pages
Published by Picador USA (first published September 2nd 2008)
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Elaine
Also posted on rabbitsfortea

Warning: This book will spoil some classics if you have yet to read them.

1. The Scarlet Letter
2. The Great Gatsby
3. A Farewell to Arms
4. The Catcher in the Rye
5. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
6. The Bell Jar

Alright, consider yourselves warned, now onward to my short review.

Silver Linings is one of those books that I wouldn't normally pick up and probably wouldn't if not for wanting to read it before I watch the movie. From the trailer, I expected a pretty light he...more
Sam
Really a 4/5 star book but because I loved it...

Perfection is boring. This book, its plot, dialogue and characters are flawed - Which is exactly why I loved Matthew Quick’s debut novel, The Silver Linings Playbook.

Pat People’s is convinced that his life is a movie directed by God and is therefore destined to have a happy ending. He just got out of ‘the bad place’ (a mental facility) and is determined to recreate himself so that ‘apart time’ between him and his wife Nikki will end. He’s living un...more
Nikki
I.. LOVED this book. So heartbreakingly honest... so funny and real.

Pat Peoples has been in "the bad place" for years. He is, by anyone's definition, crazy. He's violent, he has forgotten years of his life, and his arch nemesis is jazz musician Kenny G... but he's endlessly and relentlessly hopeful. He believes in silver linings above anything else... and he believes that by trying to become the best man he can, he will eventually reach his own silver lining. His father seems to have his own iss...more
Greg
Dec 04, 2012 Greg rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: if you like Perks of Being a Wallflower
Recommended to Greg by: The Weinstein Company
The reductive takeaway: The adult Perks of Being a Wallflower.

Sometimes I wonder if I read the same book as other people. That's usually when I hate something that other people love. It's rarer when we both like the same book, but for vastly different reasons and have vastly different interpretations. But of course, the power of literature is interpretation, so it's to be expected.

For some reason, people keep calling this book "fun" and "entertaining." I'm sure someone probably called it a "ligh...more
Brigid *Flying Kick-a-pow!*
So yeah, I saw the movie first and then read the book ... which was an interesting experience. The two of them are very different, and I think each has their strengths and weaknesses. I thought the book was all right, but I think I actually felt more of a connection to the characters as they were portrayed in the film. But anyway! Full review coming soon.
Ben
What a fun book! I’m sure it’s enjoyable for anyone that doesn’t have a stick up their ass, but it’s the kind of book that even non-readers will love, too, because it’s an easy read, and the chapters are short, and it’s entertaining the whole way through, and it’s funny as hell.

Our narrator, Pat Peoples, is pretty crazy by society’s standards. He’s been in “the bad place” for years, and once out, with the help of his sweet mother, he’s trying to get his life back on track so he can reunite with...more
Sally
I truly loved this book. The characters are all so incredibly quirky and somewhat demented - my kind of book. Pat Peoples has recently been allowed to leave "the bad place," where he went after a complete breakdown several years ago. He has remade himself into the modern day Rocky, working out and running constantly, in order to win back his former wife, Nikki.

Throughout his path of improvement, Matthew Quick introduces us to the many other twisted characters with their own issues - his father...more
Sheila
Who cries after listening to Bonnie Tyler's Total Eclipse of the Heart?

Pat Peoples, the offbeat hero of The Silver Linings Playbook.

When in a difficult situation where retaliating through violence or similar abuse is probable, he runs away, literally, from the situation, until he can feel his tears mixing with his sweat. Yes, Pat is a man who cries when he's being unkind.

He's special that way.

So everyday he improves his mind by reading books and everyday he improves his body by running and lif...more
Dani (Pen to Paper)
“Pat Peoples has a theory that his life is actually a movie produced by God, and that his God-given mission in life is to become emotionally literate, whereupon God will ensure a happy ending - which, for Pat, means the return of his estranged wife Nikki, from whom he's currently having some 'apart time'. It might not come as any surprise to learn that Pat has spent several years in a mental health facility. When Pat leaves hospital and goes to live with his parents, however, everything seems ch...more
Laura
Matthew Quick's The Silver Linings Playbook tells the story of narrator Pat Peoples's return to real life after four years in a "neural health facility." Pat is determined to win back his wife, Nikki, after their "apart time," which Pat, with somewhat pitiable naivete, takes to be a trial separation. But then Pat meets Tiffany, who offers, on one rather arduous condition, to act as a liaison between him and Nikki. Needless to say, things don't go quite as he planned.

I will confess to being a bi...more
Joy
Loved this book! Will write a longer review soon. Do yourself a favor and read this one!!

I liked that it has a positive message - believing in silver linings is to remind you to keep on trying. The old saying that every cloud has a silver lining is what Pat is counting on in his life now that he is back home living with his parents. I don't want to write too much about the story since I don't want to give away any key plot points. But I will just say that there is a happy ending for Pat and Tiff...more
Alex
Just saw the movie and I cried like a little girl..

The next day, after reading the book...

Well, I'm a little disappointed in the book. The movie was excellent. I loved the chemistry between the actors, their wonderful performances and the story.

I found myself skipping pages in the book whenever Pat talked about football. I didn't find Pat and Tiffany's romantic relationship credible because the book lacked the proper detailed descriptions of their heated encounters.

I'm going to compare the book...more
Amy Cane Dolzine
Well, thank god that's over. I don't know what's wrong with me, considering everyone else seems to think this is a good book (4 stars). Me - not so much. I can see how I would like the movie though. I should just stick with that. Maybe you just can't go from Pat Conroy's "Lords of Discipline" and Herman Koch's "The Dinner" to this ... I mean, I understand the construct - but I kind of felt like the "diary style" writing limited the author's ability to let me really feel the story. I was so distr...more
Ilze
I don't remember when was the last time that I finished a book in one sitting, but I forgot what a nice feeling it is. Though, I must add that this might not be my most coherent or grammatically correct review, considering that it is 4:30am.
Anyway, the moment I read that Matthew Quick, the author of the novel, has backpacked around Southern Africa, the feeling, which I already had after watching the trailer for the film, that this might be some philosophical-psychoanalytic crap a la Paulo Coelho...more
Songül
Nedense bu kitabı okurken ben zorlandım ve dahada ilerleyemedim şimdilik bir kenara bıraktım daha sonra tekrar denemeyi düşünüyorum :))
Marion Hudson
I read many, many, many books. I am happy to read anything from classic fiction to pure escapist chic lit. I don't mind mediocre writing, gratuitous sex scenes or week predictable plots since the authors allow me to enter another world for a one or two hours every day, and for that I am grateful. Even if their books are easily forgettable, for the time that I am reading them, they are a fun way to spend my time. But every now and again a book comes along that makes me rethink my strategy of read...more
Lynai
Mar 27, 2013 Lynai rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Lynai by: Maria Ella
Shelves: ebook
Do I believe in silver linings? Thoughts later. :)

REVIEW UPDATE***

Every cloud has a silver lining.

This is what Pat Peoples, the main protagonist, firmly believes in. He just came out from a mental institution — the bad place as he calls it — and vows never to return there again. So he works hard on improving himself by (over) exercising daily, practicing being kind than being right, and reading books that Nikki, his wife, loves. He believes that his life is a movie moving towards a happy ending,...more
Auntjenny
Read it in less than a day, because I was that desperate to find out what happened to turn Pat Peoples from a functioning high school history teacher into a man recently released from a mental institution, obsessed with working out and winning back his ex-wife.

One of the themes of this book is redemption through literature. Pat Peoples reads the books on his ex-wife's English syllabus, hoping to impress her when they are reconciled, and finds many of the books to be very depressing. You would t...more
Maya Panika
Pat Peoples is just out of ‘the Bad Place’ – an institution where he’s been for the past four years after a massive breakdown. He believes his life is a movie written and directed by God. He has a terror of Kenny G who haunts him in the night. He’s lost his life and his home, and only lives to build the perfect body so he can win back his beloved wife, Nikki.

Pat is so angsty and damaged and utterly adorable. He knows he screwed up before the breakdown, with his rages and selfish demands. Now he...more
Juli
Aww, it was so quirky and cute.


I'm so glad they carried that part across to the movie. They are both great in their own respects, but they have the most important parts in common.

For a while I wasn't sure I'd like the book, but as I kept reading, it kept getting better and better. So glad I read it.

This seems to be a big deal for a lot of people, that other book's plots get divulged, but to me, I found that wonderful. Now I actually want to read some of them (and as I thought, give others a mi...more
Mark Bennett
Blown away by how different the book is from the film. Loved the film and it will certainly win a few Oscars, but I hadn't imagined how marvelous David O. Russell's adaptation was, stirring and compelling, dramatically intense and laugh-out-loud funny, and ever so heartwarming, and full-on, a killer "silver lining" ending.

Equally blown away by Quick's novel. I had peeked in after it arrived in the mail yesterday and I put it by the bed. Figured to dip in at night. Woke up this morning and blew t...more
Thao Bui
The book was fairly different from its movie version.

Sometimes Pat felt that his mother treated him as if he was a child, which was somehow what I felt listening to him and his story, not that it meant he made any less sense =o) I did enjoy his narrative style =o)

I loved the fact that he usually looked up at the sky to see the cloud, which was his favorite thing. Also, his belief about silver linings and happy endings was beautiful. Was he crazy? I don't know. Maybe his reality was a bit diffe...more
Gabby
When I started reading this book, two novels and a movie immediately came to mind: The Catcher In The Rye, She's Come Undone<\b>, and Regarding Henry<\b>. The main character, Pat, has just been released from the hospital after an indeterminate length of time, and it's obvious that he is not thinking like a 30+ year old man, and that he has memory lapses about what has happened to him. Pat's goal, and our goal as readers, is to find out why Pat is the way he is; for example, why does...more
K.D. Oliveros
The movie is better than the book. Normally, it is the reverse but this is one of the exceptions.

The movie got nominated in the 2013 Oscars for Best Picture, Actor in a Leading Role, Actress in a Leading Role (won), Actor in a Supporting Role, Actress in a Supporting Role, Directing, Film Editing and Writing.

I finished reading the book yesterday and so I bought a pirated DVD copy and watched it today. The movie people made the dull book somewhat better. Dull because it is all a rehash. I've seen...more
Martha Payne
As much as I loved the film for its top-rate acting performances (and Bradley Cooper ain't bad to look at either), I left the theatre feeling cheated somehow. The plot just didn't add up. The characterizations unraveled toward the conclusion, which was too pat, and ultimately unsatisfying. When I saw the novel had been published by Farrar, I had to read it--how could a publisher of high quality fiction accept such an uneven story?
Happy to report the novel is both a good read and a highly plausi...more
Sarah
I did the unthinkable here...I watched the movie before I read the book. Here's the thing though...I was unaware it was based on a book. However, based on what I felt after reading the book, I think I need to start reading the book after I see the movie. I'm one of those people that will pick apart all the differences in the movie and it often makes me enjoy it less.

The movie was outstanding...let me start out by saying that.
The book was incredible. There were a lot of major differences. A lot....more
Kate Savage
Pat, fresh from an institution, tries to change himself so that he can have a desperately wanted reunion with his wife.

Pat's goal is simple-a reunion with his wife. He believes he and his wife began "apart time" a few months ago when he had to go to the bad place, aka, an institution filled with unattractive nurses, pills, and music therapy. Pat now lives with his parents and works out constantly so that Nikki will see how hard he has worked for her.

This whole plan cracks around the edges as he...more
Didi
My first thought upon reading this is that it's an adult version of Perks of being a wallflower. One glance at the reviews here shows that I'm not the first who thought of it.

I've not watched the movie and we know how notorious for screenplays to be different from the novel it's adapted. I'm really curious how the movie is like cos in the first half of the book, Jennifer Lawrence's character does nothing but run. I would not even categorise her as a main character, so for her to win truckloads o...more
Rose
Apr 04, 2013 Rose rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Approachable for new adult readers, Follow up for The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Suicide Notes
Shelves: favorites
I wanted to see Silver Linings Playbook The Movie pretty bad, but it wasn't in theatres and I refused to watch it online. It seemed like the whole universe had seen the movie already. So by lack of my Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper fulfilment I started to read the book.

And I'm glad I did.

I had absolutely no expectations of this book, which is a good thing because it would surprise me. And boy, it did. Despite the heavy subject it was funny and upbeat. I loved how Pat would say "I am prac...more
Amanda
Mar 17, 2013 Amanda rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Amanda by: Magic Readers
Shelves: fiction
I read this book for a book group. I enjoyed the book, but am baffled at how they will be able to turn it into a movie. It is mostly Pat's (the main character) thoughts throughout the days and weeks the story takes place. I just don't think it will adapt well. Although as we all know, the book is always better anyway!

The story is about a man who has come home to live with his parents after a stay in a psychiatric facility. I do not know if it was the writing style or if it was intentional (I am...more
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The Silver Linings Playbook (Paperback)
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Matthew Quick (aka Q) is the New York Times bestselling author of several novels, including THE SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK, which was made into an Oscar-winning film. His work has been translated into more than twenty languages and has received a PEN/Hemingway Award Honorable Mention, among other accolades. Q lives in Massachusetts with his wife, novelist/pianist Alicia Bessette.
More about Matthew Quick...
Sorta Like a Rock Star Boy21 Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock

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“I don't want to stay in the bad place, where no one believes in silver linings or love or happy endings.” 422 people liked it
“Life is not a PG feel-good movie. Real life often ends badly. Literature tries to document this reality, while showing us it is still possible for us to endure nobly.” 313 people liked it
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