Erika Gill's Reviews > How To Be Good
How To Be Good
by Nick Hornby
by Nick Hornby
The first two pages of this book are hilarious, and the narrative stays consistently amusing beyond that point. The characters' limited perspectives are so wonderfully flat and self-centered! Not a single character in this book desires to actually be good, not if it interferes with their self-righteousness or their conception of what, exactly, the term entails. Katie Carr is a wonderful unreliable narrator, funny and sarcastic and a seeming projection of the mind of every guilty liberal stuck on his or her First World problems.
How To Be Good is a highly polished mirror held up to society with the same cold, sharp objectivity Hornby can bring to seemingly any type of character, along with his gift of the over-warm, squishy embarrassment of everyday life delivered perfectly on the page with uncomfortable accuracy. The in-depth examination of what it is to be good, and be human at once really hit home for me, and I'd recommend it to anyone interested in a smart novel guaranteed to make you examine one's own state of "Good-ness".
How To Be Good is a highly polished mirror held up to society with the same cold, sharp objectivity Hornby can bring to seemingly any type of character, along with his gift of the over-warm, squishy embarrassment of everyday life delivered perfectly on the page with uncomfortable accuracy. The in-depth examination of what it is to be good, and be human at once really hit home for me, and I'd recommend it to anyone interested in a smart novel guaranteed to make you examine one's own state of "Good-ness".
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