Bel Canto
A Novel
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Publisher:
New York : - Harper Perennial
Pages:
318
ISBN:
9780007268313, 0007268319, 9780061565311, 0061565318
Language:
English
Notes:
Originally published: London: Fourth Estate, 2001.
Statement of responsibility:
Ann Patchett
Physical description:
318, 21 p. ; 20 cm.
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Quotes
Add a QuoteAll of the love and the longing a body can contain was spun into not more than two and a half minutes of song, and when she came to the highest notes it seemed that all they had been given in their lives and all they had lost came together and made a weight that was almost impossible to bear.

Comment
Add a CommentI read Salvage the Bones by the same authour (it was on every reviewer's 2011 top 10 list) and found it utterly compelling. Subject matter was tough and foreign to me- but the writing transformed me to the place. I was compelled to keep turning the pages despite the despairing and sometimes gruesome subject matter. Based on that, I put a hold on Bel Canto. It started with high hopes for me, but ultimately I found it slow and unbeleivable. (The only fascination for me was that the narration seemed to me to be written in a convincing male voice and it was difficult to remember the authour is a woman.) With Salvage the Bones in mind, I will read more Ann Patchett - The Magician's Assistant is next for me.
I finished this book because others had liked it and I believed it would be a story I'd like. It kept my attention through the end but I can't say I really enjoyed it nor did I find it believable. I know it was based on a true event from several years ago, but that didn't change my attitude that it was a very unlikely story. It was disappointing.
Fabulous. Beautifully written. A must read!
Worth reading, although as pointed out by several others, it is quite slow-moving in the middle. Premise is a bit far-fetched, but overall the ending makes up for it. I would recommend this novel.
OK - so I'm only half way through the book, but I'm finding the book really slow and dull. Nothing happens. The premise is incredibly unrealistic. I can't imagine a hostage taking lasting 4.5 months, especially when the hostage takers are a bunch of teenagers and some incompetent general rebels. Plus it seems that the hostages could walk out at any time. I'll persevere, but I'm really temped to not waste any more time on this book. Well I tried, but didn't finish. Too many good books to read to waste any more time on this book.
Patchett's writing is the best part of this book. She really knows how to take you in. The story appears to lag somewhat in the middle but persevering, I discovered the intent was to convey (and it does) a 4 1/2 month period of time the characters experience. In the end, it is a story of passion and love. I would also recommend Patchett's "State of Wonder", a totally different, but equally absorbing novel.
A good read. Loved getting to know the characters.
A poignant, achingly beautiful portrait of a community that forms under the bleakest of circumstances: a band of mostly teenage Peruvian revolutionaries take hostage the wealthy, cosmopolitan guests of their hated president. As the hostage crisis drags on, unlooked for friendships and love affairs develop between kidnappers and victims. Patchett masterfully brings to life a multinational cast of characters: a Japanese businessman, an American opera diva, an embittered revolutionary, a French diplomat, a peasant girl determined to educate herself. Bit by bit these isolated castaways create a fragile, beauty-loving utopia, but reality will soon intrude, with tragic results.
This is a wonderful book, filled with suspense and wisdom. Not to be missed.
Frankly, I found the premise of the story completely unbelievable. The nicest terrorists in the world capture the most obedient hostages ever and we're supposed to be surprised when it all goes to hell after pages and pages of operatic boredom? Everyone is too naive to exist.