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The Rich Part of Life

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After Teddy loses his mother to a car accident, he and his young brother are left with their eccentric Civil War professor father, who is more able to discuss Confederate footwear than his sons' day at school. But Teddy's father plays the lottery with his wife's old numbers, and wins $190 million, immediately transforming their lives forever. For the first time, the family must learn what "the rich part of life" really is. Creating the perfect balance of humor and pathos, Jim Kokoris takes us on an unforgettable journey through the ups and downs of this revelation of unexpected wealth.

336 pages, Paperback

First published May 16, 2001

17 people are currently reading
487 people want to read

About the author

Jim Kokoris

15 books74 followers
Chicago-area novelist Jim Kokoris is the author of three books, "The Rich Part of Life," "Sister North," and "The Pursuit of Other Interests." His books have been published in 15 languages and have been optioned for film consideration. The winner of The Friends Of American Writers Award for Best First Novel ( 2001), his humor essays have appeared regularly in The Chicago Tribune Sunday Magazine.
He is married and has three sons.

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5 stars
207 (22%)
4 stars
348 (37%)
3 stars
297 (31%)
2 stars
72 (7%)
1 star
14 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 135 reviews
Profile Image for Tea Jovanović.
Author 394 books765 followers
May 10, 2013
Roman o odrastanju... o dečaku koji prerano ostaje bez majke a otac dobije na lutriji... i Večito pitanje, šta biste uradili s novcem da dobijete na lotou... Topla i nežna priča...
Profile Image for Pamela Pickering.
570 reviews11 followers
February 13, 2008
I found this book listed in a book chat room. It's opening line: The day we won the lottery I was wearing the wax lips that my dad bought me and the Nose Picker at the gas station. How can you not like a book that has a entry like that. What a charming find. It has the most interesting characters. I have to say my favorite would be the out of work vampiric actor. It has many humorous moments, it is sometimes predictable but still very enjoyable.
Profile Image for Christine.
186 reviews21 followers
August 11, 2016
A great book that was funny, suspenseful and engaging. It is like 'My Big Fat Greek Wedding' meets 'The Descendants' -- the story of a Greek family with the type of hilarious humor that all ethnic groups can appreciate, used as a backdrop for a much darker story of sudden wealth, dark secrets and legacy, all narrated by an 11 year old boy. I loved the Chicago setting. Author Jim Kokoris also has the rare gift (which I like to call 'To Kill a Mockingbird' syndrome) of being able to tell an adult story as seen through the eyes of a child, with all the requisite innocence and humor. Full of laugh out loud moments and great conversations. This was recommended to me by a book club, and I would recommend it to anyone who likes a good, engaging story. Chicago natives will love it, too!
Profile Image for Victoria Miller.
168 reviews18 followers
December 4, 2015
Loved it! Told from the perspective of an eleven year old boy, with a younger brother ("The Nose Picker"), whose mother has died, Jim Kokoris has written a most engaging and unexpected tale, with a wonderful cast of eccentric but engaging characters. Kokoris weaves a subtle nuance throughout his writing: what remains unsaid is more powerful than what is told as the story unfolds. Don't want to give anything away....there are some things you'll see coming and some you won't, but always the unexpected, too. A very enjoyable read with some great characters and a quite surprising plot.
Profile Image for Joanie Driemeyer.
176 reviews3 followers
September 21, 2016
Liked this one a lot. The characters are unique. The story explores the question of what happens to people when they suddenly come into a lot of money. In this case, it affected others more than those who won the money.
Profile Image for Beth Tortorici.
19 reviews
February 26, 2015
An interesting read but moved slow. Kind of slow. Interesting father/son relationship. Had to force myself to finish!
60 reviews
January 3, 2025
No tiene ningún objetivo de ser, y eso lo hace mejor
Profile Image for Book Concierge.
3,078 reviews387 followers
November 24, 2015
Professor of history Theo Pappas plays his dead wife's favorite lottery numbers - the date of birth of his oldest son, Teddy - and wins $190 million. The lives of the Pappas family members are forever changed, but all does not go smoothly. Kokoris gives the reader a wonderful cast of characters who are vividly drawn. My book club really enjoyed this book. We couldn't help ourselves and simply HAD to "cast the movie" - Kevin Spacey as Theo. And, of course, it made us wonder - would WE be changed by winning the lottery?
Profile Image for Wisewebwoman.
215 reviews17 followers
October 30, 2014
Told from the perspective of an 11 year old boy who recently lost his mother, it is extraordinarily well written.

On contemplating his widower father who is not well himself: "Due to the uncertain state of his health, I was convinced that Tommy and I daily walked the fine line that separates children from orphans." He then looks up "Orphanages" in the yellow pages.

Through the course of the novel we see the slow emergence of the baffled and disconnected father after he was won the lottery and refuses to spend it.


Profile Image for Rieta.
901 reviews2 followers
April 1, 2016
I seriously loved this book. If I lived near Jim Kokoris I would ask to be an editor so I could read everything first. He has such an amazing ability to develop character. I've never really had a favorite author but I'm getting there with Kokoris. Loved this book.
6 reviews
May 10, 2016
I can't get enough of this author and the way that he paints a picture with words of the story. It's funny and quirky. I highly recommend!
Profile Image for Engie.
143 reviews14 followers
May 30, 2017
Es gracioso que no lo había puesto como leído siendo el libro que me inició en el hábito de la lectura, pero bueno, aquí está. Mejor tarde que nunca.
Profile Image for Kate.
1,074 reviews13 followers
July 6, 2018
Fairly certain that everyone has a 'what would I do if I won the lottery' list. Sometimes it's multiple lists, adjusted by the size of the prize. I have such a list, which is interesting given that I don't buy lottery tickets. My list is -

Hire an island and take all my friends on a beach holiday.
Take a world trip that includes Iceland, the Bahamas and the Maldives.
Choose some charities that a big contribution would make a massive difference to (I already have some that are close to my heart).
Buy a seaside shack in the place where I spend summer (McCrae) - nothing fancy because there will always be sand on the floor.

Given the existence of these lists, it's intriguing when lotteries go unclaimed (as happened in Melbourne this week) - and this is the topic of Jim Kokoris's novel, The Rich Part of Life.

Teddy's mother was killed in a car accident, leaving him, his younger brother and their father, Theo. Theo is an eccentric Civil War professor, whose grief is crippling.

I couldn't count on him for much. He frequently got lost when he drove, misplaced his wallet and keys almost daily, and drifted off in the middle of most conversations.


Theo enters a lottery using his wife's old numbers, and wins $190 million. He is slow to claim the prize and when he does, the family's life changes in unexpected ways. Despite Teddy's wishlist (a ranch, new bikes and a big television), Theo seemingly has no interest in spending the money. Naturally, other people do. Theo's elderly aunt and his brother, Frank, move in and various acquaintances and neighbours are suddenly very friendly. Teddy begins to understand that to be 'rich' means many things.

The broad concept for this story is appealing, and presents questions such as how money changes people, and whether some are more 'deserving' of a windfall than others. The exploration of the eternal question - can money buy happiness, or in this case ameliorate grief - is a little too obviously executed given the family's situation but nevertheless was interesting. Notably, while people avoided the family in their grief, they clamoured to be near in their prosperity.

My problem with the story was that it became cluttered with characters, each trying to stake their claim and each with obvious motivations. Furthermore, these additional characters were all a little odd - the ex-beauty-queen, the washed-up actor who only played vampires; a motherless baby; a worldly football player-turned-bodyguard, and so on. As the story became increasingly 'busy', the delicately explored relationship between Teddy and Theo was lost, and any reflections on grief that Kokoris could provide from Teddy's perspective were drowned in the noise - a shame given that Teddy's voice was perceptive and real.

2/5 Overdone.
Profile Image for Monica Caldicott.
1,153 reviews7 followers
Read
May 5, 2020
Who plays the lottery? Which one of you has the dream of winning Power Ball and changing your life forever?
 What would you buy if you won $190 million in a lottery?

 Eleven-year-old Teddy Pappas also has a list of things he wants.

 Read p. 10: "One day after school …or forgotten in a place that was inconvenient for me to retrieve." He also adds a new car and a bigger house and a robot to serve him cold Cokes in his new waterbed.
 Read p. 12: "A few hours later … our lives a spectacle, a sad parade."

 One thing the lottery money cannot buy him, however, is the return of Teddy's dead mother or the making of his older, distant and unemotional father into someone he can depend on.

 When the news gets out that the Pappas family has won big-time, all sort of crazy characters show up for a piece of the pie: sex neighbor Mrs. Wilcox brings an actual pie, old Aunt Bess moves in with her ancient cat and Uncle Frank abandons his latest attempt to film a successful vampire movie. Add to this the constant requests for money, not a penny of which Teddy's father will agree to spend.

 This book is set in suburban Chicago in a fictitious town that may very well be Winnetka or Wilmette. Come along as the Pappas' figure out what really is the rich part of life.
Profile Image for Pablo S. Martín.
387 reviews20 followers
July 7, 2020
La verdad, disfruté mucho este libro, así que no logro comprender como no es más conocido.

El argumento esta bien llevado, y satiriza de una forma bastante realista el cómo sería ganar la lotería, y las consecuencias de dicho premio.
Todo en el argumento incluso puede rozar lo cliché, pero una vez se lo analiza, es totalmente fehaciente y posible que todo suceda tal cual en el libro... Demostrando que la vida es un cliché constante y redundante.
Interesante, ciertamente, lo que nos plantea el autor.
No es un cinco estrellas, primero, porque más allá del buen enfoque satírico, prefiere quedarse en lo posible cuando, tal vez, explotando la situación, podría haber conseguido aún mayor efecto.
Y segundo, porque las últimas 30 hojas del libro no me parecieron del todo ''realistas'', aunque, tal vez, si lo sea, pero no me pareció que el autor lo desarrollase de la forma adecuada, ya que uno, incluso, llega a sentir lástima del enemigo, lo cual, tal vez un merito del autor, provoca en el lector reacciones contradictorias.

En fin, muy buena lectura. Divertida, tierna, y entretenida.
Muchas gracias, Jim Kokoris, por este libro.
Ojalá encuentre más libros de este autor en español.
Profile Image for Romi.
1,404 reviews
July 20, 2017
I would give this 3.5 stars. It was a lovely idea with quirky and sweet characters but I found that it dragged. It could have been tightened up. It's interesting because he hit the jackpot with his next book it's...nice...outside. This book was a warm up to that one that fixed the writing issues I saw in this one!
519 reviews
February 8, 2020
Actualyl I would rate this 3.5 stars. This was in a Reader's Digest Condensed book that a friend of mine gave me. The characters all have things that are troubling them in life. Circumstances aren't all that they seem and how things came to be is a wonderful story woven throughout the story. This is at its core a story of family. Love and connection. It was a good story.
1,629 reviews7 followers
May 18, 2017
I thought the first part of the book was slow; however, the second half of the book made up for it. An exciting and satisfying ending changed my opinion of the book from a 3 star to a 4. A good story worth reading.
1 review
March 17, 2018
Amazon and Goodreads

Funny,sad,touching,inspirational---what more could a reader want in a book! And I recommend It's Nice Outside for the same reasons. Jim Kokonis is a wonderful author,and his books are a delightful,easy read.
Profile Image for Heribert Mestres.
115 reviews1 follower
September 5, 2019
He llegit la traducció castellana (Elena Barrutia). Novela i traducció molt fluixes. El que prometia humor i diversos punts de vista sobre la nova situació familiar, queda molt mal lligat, personatges i escenes forçades. Només volia acabar-la per dir 'ja està'.
146 reviews4 followers
June 6, 2025
I really liked a lot about this book and genuinely found it to be a page-turner. It would have made a fantastic movie from the nineties, to be honest. Upon inspection, the plot is a LITTLE messy, the characterization a BIT expected.
Profile Image for Pam.
515 reviews2 followers
June 26, 2017
Really enjoyed this read. Very entertaining story.
Profile Image for Dave Moyer.
685 reviews6 followers
January 15, 2018
I really enjoyed this book. I'm not sure that the trip to the Civil War enactment furthered things a whole lot, but other than that, the dialogue is strong, and the character development of the kids and the main characters brother, I thought were very strong. Some nice wry humor at times. I liked his latest It's.Nice.Outside even more.
Profile Image for Ginny.
7 reviews8 followers
June 27, 2018
I found a copy of this novel in a book sale and its like finding a treasure ✨
Profile Image for Lee.
1,024 reviews
March 11, 2019
Cute beginning and nice idea for a plot. Got a little predictable by the end.
Profile Image for Valerie.
1,207 reviews5 followers
March 5, 2021
Got off to a great start and had some good doses of humor but overall the writing was very clunky.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 135 reviews

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