Anne's review

Anne's review

I Know This Much Is True I Know This Much Is True
by Wally Lamb

223993 Anne's review
rating: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars

Years ago, I read Lamb's first novel, She's Come Undone, and was struck by his ability to write an incredibly believable story from the viewpoint of a woman. Since then, I've been meaning to read this follow-up novel, but honestly, the length of it has always kind of intimidated me (901 pages). Then the other day, I picked it off my shelf and became engrossed right away. The story is told from the perspective of Dominick Birdsey, a middle-aged divorced house-painter whose schizophrenic twin brother, Thomas, just cut off his own hand in public to protest the war. As Thomas is shipped off to a mental institution, Dominick finds himself in the familiar position of trying to protect his brother at the expense of his own career and love life. The story flips back and forth between present day and the past - with Dominik exploring his childhood with an abusive step-father, an unknown father, and a mother who seems to prefer Thomas and is wholly unable to protect herself and her children. At ...more

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message 1: by Brooke
05/07/2008 04:02PM

224722 Is it really worth 900 pages?

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message 2: by Anne
05/07/2008 07:10PM

223993 It is...but I would just skim/skip the chapters that are the grandfather's autobiography. I don't think they add that much to the story that you can't get from Dominick's reactions afterwards.

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