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What Members Thought

This was a wonderful book. I LOVE Ed Kennedy. I thought the idea of this book was enlightening and heart warming. The story is about Ed. He thwarts a bank robber and saves the lives of his friends and bank customers. The scene is actually humorous. I giggled through it. Soon after the attempted robbery gone bad, Ed receives the ace of diamonds in the mail. It has 3 addresses on it. So begins the life of The Messenger. Through Ed’s adventure, he shares his life with his friends Ritchie, Marv, Aud
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Ed Kennedy is a cabdriver who spends most of his time playing cards with his friends. After Ed manages to stop a bank robber he begins receiving cards in the mail. Each card leads him to a person with a situation he needs to solve. I liked the main theme that even small acts can have a big impact and you don't have to be someone special to do good deeds. I loved Ed's dog, The Doorman. Ed's love for Audrey wasn't as well developed to me. I never really got why he was so interested in her. The end
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This was a very different and original book! It was dark at times but I liked that it was also tender and funny.

I didn't love this nearly as much as The Book Thief. The writing style from The Book Thief was there, although not quite as refined. Mostly, I just didn't care as much about the characters. And I'm still deciding how I feel about the ending.
I did really like the structure of the book and how the cards were used to carry the story along in addition to their symbolism in Ed's tasks or messages. And I did feel compelled to finish the story and find out how it ended. But if you are only planning to ...more
I did really like the structure of the book and how the cards were used to carry the story along in addition to their symbolism in Ed's tasks or messages. And I did feel compelled to finish the story and find out how it ended. But if you are only planning to ...more

After reading some books I wonder how can they be placed in the category of children books or young adults, this is one of them. I think this book is meant for everyone and don't be discouraged from picking up this book because it doesn't fall in your age group category.
Sometimes, you come across a book that addresses themes that reflect your weird habits. Something that you won't normally admit to people, a habit that is not common and if you think about it for too long it is downright weird. T ...more
Sometimes, you come across a book that addresses themes that reflect your weird habits. Something that you won't normally admit to people, a habit that is not common and if you think about it for too long it is downright weird. T ...more

May 02, 2009
Sunflower
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fiction-read-2009
"Ed Kennedy. Taxi driver. Local loser. Cornerstone of mediocrity. Sexual midget. Pathetic card player. Weird-shit magnet." Via the delivery of a series of playing cards Ed is given challenges and finds that in caring for other people and finally himself, he discovers he can move beyond his self-defined limits.
The bits I liked best were his interactions with his dog, who smells terrible, drinks coffee, communicates in hilarious one-liners with his owner, and is described as a sage at the end of ...more
The bits I liked best were his interactions with his dog, who smells terrible, drinks coffee, communicates in hilarious one-liners with his owner, and is described as a sage at the end of ...more

Nov 14, 2007
Joanna
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
young-adult,
2009-read
I really enjoyed this book. Yes, the book followed a pretty set formula. Yes, it was sentimental. Still, the writing was brilliant and the characters were wonderful. The story traces a few months of Ed Kennedy's life as a lazy slacker post-high school. He drives a cab, plays cards with his friends, and lives in the small town where he grew up. Nothing much is happening in his life. Then, he begins the journey of the book. He starts receiving instructions for people to visit, and, somehow, he kee
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Ed is a perfectly ordinary person living an ordinary life until one day he gets a playing card in the mail. The card has three addresses on it and soon Ed finds that people at those addresses need something. As Ed pushes himself to help others, both strangers and friends, he become more than ordinary. I really enjoyed reading this novel. I really liked all the characters and liked the variety of tasks that Ed tackled to complete the cards. I really appreciated the message that the author was try
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Charming and thought-provoking. I wasn't as touched as The Book Thief, but it was a good book.
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What a moving great book. Ed was a great main character and his sidekicks fit. I really felt that I was going through Ed's journey with him.
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Aug 31, 2010
Jennifer Eklund
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fiction-literature,
i-own

Jan 24, 2011
Christina
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
contemporary,
2011-reads

Mar 14, 2011
Kristina
rated it
liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
own-kindle,
read-in-2011

Oct 13, 2012
Vesra (When She Reads)
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
paperback,
fiction,
teens,
c-yellow,
young-adult,
i,
author-z,
humor,
mystery-thrillers,
pub-knopf-books-for-young-readers

Sep 24, 2014
Mita
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
australian,
read-in-2014