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A Little Life: Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2015

A Little Life: Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2015

byHanya Yanagihara
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Top positive review

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Lorraine Pestell
5.0 out of 5 starsI feel proud to have survived this book!
Reviewed in Australia on 22 July 2016
Wow! Where to start, and what to say about this book that hasn't already been said... Hand-on-heart, "A Little Life" is both the best and worst book I've ever read! A super-heavyweight novel, it should come with a health warning. It should be compulsory reading for anyone who has committed any form of abuse on a fellow human (or animal, come to that...). In fact, their victims should be given the opportunity to read it to them from a safe distance.

If like me, your mind has a mind of its own, take good care of yourself while reading this book. Take a break with something lighter, particularly if you're prone to nightmares and insomnia.

I read one of Hanya Yanagihara's interview, in which she stated her goal with "A Little Life" was to turn everything up to just beyond normal tolerance. Well, she absolutely succeeded! This book consumed me as fast as I could consume it, so much so that it took me a full two months to read. As an abuse victim and longstanding PTSD "survivor" (NOT!), there were many times I couldn't continue reading the intensity of situations described. Not only are they graphic and horrifying, but sadly they are also utterly accurate.

On the more optimistic side, "A Little Life" is a love story on so many levels. There is a huge amount of kindness in the world, although it sometimes doesn't feel like it. I found myself communing with Harold and Julia, with Doctor Andy, and of course with Willem and Jude.

A very long book - my favourite kind! - the language is dense, meandering and demanding of concentration. After paragraphs and paragraphs of sharing Jude's agonies, Ms Yanagihara almost glosses over the most significant events. Several times I would turn a page and say, "Wait a minute! What just happened? OMG, OMG, OMG!"

I feel proud to have survived this book.
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10 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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Anne Connolly
1.0 out of 5 starsAnd in the end...
Reviewed in Australia on 4 February 2016
What could have been said in say 400 pages, turned into almost a freeform association of ideas and so not very captivating for the reader for a good deal of the time. That's a pity because the subject is one of the most important of our time. I don't know what the editors were thinking, but the reader willed the whole thing to end. And in the end...the final section seemed contrived. So I am guessing that the author is not very good at endings. Other than that , some good writing, suspense, descriptions; and for this subject of child abuse - its not an easy task.
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One person found this helpful

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From Australia

Lorraine Pestell
5.0 out of 5 stars I feel proud to have survived this book!
Reviewed in Australia on 22 July 2016
Verified Purchase
Wow! Where to start, and what to say about this book that hasn't already been said... Hand-on-heart, "A Little Life" is both the best and worst book I've ever read! A super-heavyweight novel, it should come with a health warning. It should be compulsory reading for anyone who has committed any form of abuse on a fellow human (or animal, come to that...). In fact, their victims should be given the opportunity to read it to them from a safe distance.

If like me, your mind has a mind of its own, take good care of yourself while reading this book. Take a break with something lighter, particularly if you're prone to nightmares and insomnia.

I read one of Hanya Yanagihara's interview, in which she stated her goal with "A Little Life" was to turn everything up to just beyond normal tolerance. Well, she absolutely succeeded! This book consumed me as fast as I could consume it, so much so that it took me a full two months to read. As an abuse victim and longstanding PTSD "survivor" (NOT!), there were many times I couldn't continue reading the intensity of situations described. Not only are they graphic and horrifying, but sadly they are also utterly accurate.

On the more optimistic side, "A Little Life" is a love story on so many levels. There is a huge amount of kindness in the world, although it sometimes doesn't feel like it. I found myself communing with Harold and Julia, with Doctor Andy, and of course with Willem and Jude.

A very long book - my favourite kind! - the language is dense, meandering and demanding of concentration. After paragraphs and paragraphs of sharing Jude's agonies, Ms Yanagihara almost glosses over the most significant events. Several times I would turn a page and say, "Wait a minute! What just happened? OMG, OMG, OMG!"

I feel proud to have survived this book.
10 people found this helpful
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Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars Tragedy & friendship writ large
Reviewed in Australia on 8 September 2015
Verified Purchase
It's a long time since I've wept so much reading a novel. At first I thought: there's a lot of telling, not showing, but it wasn't long before I entered this world fully, & compulsively read to the bitter end. And bitter it is. If anyone doubted the damage that child abuse causes (& the abuse Jude suffers is extreme), they have only to read this novel, as well as watch the many child abuse hearings going on round the world. So many lives ruined, so many dead. A psychologist once said that the saying " We are never given more than we can bear" is complete nonsense. She had seen many in mental institutions who had been given more than is humanly possible to bear. Why the product description talks about the light at the end of the tunnel is a mystery.

As other reviewers have said, the novel concerns four male college friends of various racial backgrounds as they navigate their way towards fame & success. There's JB the witty ambitious painter, Willem the kind actor, Malcolm the sensitive & somewhat insecure architect, & Jude the maths genius, linguist, musician & lawyer, who never reveals anything of his past, unlike the others. Add to these a colourful cast of friends & relations. Yanagihara takes us through a journey of almost forty years as these people grow, develop, change, & ebb towards & away from each other. At first it seems that we will follow the four equally, but the story homes in on Jude, who walks with pain & difficulty after an incident with a car when he was 15. We are shown that he is physically & mentally scarred, that he cuts himself, & in a series of painful flashbacks we discover why. This makes for searing reading. We hope against hope that with the good things now happening in his life, he will be able to trust, love & enjoy himself & those who love him, but with a childhood as relentlessly bleak as his, it's a tough ask. Yanagihara makes us understand how hard it is for him to get through his days. She explores the demands & rewards of friendship & love with a clear, deep eye, & like many, I was left exhausted & profoundly moved. Will he be able to continue, after the death of his lover? Can his adoptive parents save him? Can his friends? Is it right to let a person go, when life simply becomes too great a struggle? No wonder this is odds on to win the Man Booker.
3 people found this helpful
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wendy o'dea
5.0 out of 5 stars Very different
Reviewed in Australia on 28 February 2016
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For me this was beautifully written and the development of characters was very good. No it is not happy endings and light and sweetness. There are times when I went back and reread passages and then sat and contemplated viewpoints expressed. I laughed, cried, was saddened, angry and a whole lot of other emotions. I struggled with through the pages with Caleb.
How we get to where we are, what makes us who we are, what the world does not see. The struggles, the inner turmoils. A view of a life.
I only give five stars to books that I would read again. This is one I will read again.
3 people found this helpful
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Chhaya Chawla
5.0 out of 5 stars Read slowly, deliberately.
Reviewed in Australia on 11 June 2022
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Every thought, every moment, every character so completely and purposely designed. All the questions we’d ask ourself, all the answers and non answers. Jude and his friends, so similar and so different, it’s very easy to find someone to root for their win. Read this slowly, deliberately and again.
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Aunt Annie
5.0 out of 5 stars There are not enough trigger warnings in the world
Reviewed in Australia on 5 November 2019
Verified Purchase
This is absolutely beautifully written, and engrossing, but you’ll feel like you’re being skinned alive by the horror and sadness of some of it. There’s no doubt it’s a good, a wonderful book. Just, maybe not a good choice if you’ve ever been sexually abused.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Phenomenal
Reviewed in Australia on 15 June 2016
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This was an absolutely phenomenal book, a true masterpiece. I doubt I'll be the first person to be a bit teary while reading it, and I certainly won't be the last. A dark undercurrent of pain, loss and addiction runs throughout the book, and yet there are still uplifting moments of love, joy and humanity in it to even up the ledger, and the writing is just superb, making you feel the every emotion along with the principle characters. It's a meaty book, and I'm sure some might find it hard to identify with the characters straight off the bat, but once you are in, this book sucks you further and further into the lives of the main protagonists and leaves you desperately chasing the next twist. A book seriously worth investing in.
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MarnieB
5.0 out of 5 stars This is an outstanding story and beautifully written. It is an incredibly emotional story and ...
Reviewed in Australia on 6 August 2017
Verified Purchase
This is an outstanding story and beautifully written.
It is an incredibly emotional story and I for one found it too difficult to carry.
I wanted to finish it but could not. I am a highly emotional person and this story just was too much for me to carry.
I think Hanya Yanagihara is a highly talented author and I wish her every success for the future.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Not for the faint-hearted....
Reviewed in Australia on 14 February 2016
Verified Purchase
This book will stay with me forever, in a hauntingly beautiful way. While much of the story deals with very grim subject matter, it is mostly done by inference, and sleight of hand. Therefore, for me, the story is about long lasting friendship, and in particular, the friends of a beautiful soul who could not see his own worth, despite the reflection from the eyes of all those who finally loved him, and who loved him for decades. There were parts of this book that literally gave me goosebumps, and there were times when I couldn't bear to read any more - for a while, anyway. It was a heart-breakingly sad book to read, and yet, I was uplifted. I would not recommend this to anyone who is down or depressed. At least, not while they are particularly down anyway. But I encourage all others to fall in love, as I did...
6 people found this helpful
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grace
5.0 out of 5 stars amazing, but be warned!
Reviewed in Australia on 25 January 2022
Verified Purchase
it’s such a heartbreaking read, it’s written so beautifully, but prepare to be sad.
a warning to future readers PLEASE look up the trigger warnings before you start reading.
it’s a book that i truely love and will read again but when i’m emotionally ready, so make sure that you’re ready too :)
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ineke
5.0 out of 5 stars Sad but brilliant story
Reviewed in Australia on 25 February 2016
Verified Purchase
Heart wrenching story of four men who remain friends through their adolescence and later life. Well written description of events that the four main characters experience and their psychological make-up. The only slight criticism I have is one of form/style. The four characters (and a few others who are involved with their lives) tell their story in the third person and therefore it takes a little time to realise who is "talking" when a new chapter begins.
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