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The Hazards Of Good Breeding: A Novel (2004)

The Hazards of Good Breeding: A Novel (2004)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
2.94 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0393324834 (ISBN13: 9780393324839)
Language
English
Publisher
w. w. norton & company

About book The Hazards Of Good Breeding: A Novel (2004)

this book isn't wonderful for its plot... there was not a surprise in the novel. that said, i don't imagine that the author was aiming for an original rendering of its narrative. rather, shattuck was seeking to investigate the neuroses of its characters. it is here that the book enthralls.the hazards of good breeding soars with its prose. shattuck is smart in her imagining of the lives of immigrants from the perspective of privileged white folks. now, i can't be sure how accurate her assessment of white people's perceptions is... but, she imagines the world of the book's white folks in a manner that is rich... rife with neuroses and easy cash flow borne from generations of wealth, whiteness, and the education both enable. i appreciated this book and am still working through its political implications...

Like so much in life, this novel's success rests on a single condom. If you make it to the condom (page 170), you're money -- and you'll long remember this book's insight into isolation and social constructs. If you don't make it to the condom, it's over -- because you'll put the book down one day and never pick it up again, because the characters make you tired and the plot just plain puts you to sleep. What this book does best is to depict Jack and Faith, divorcees who are uncovering their true selves mid-life, after wasting many years in a marriage that was itself a hazard of good breeding.

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The Dunlaps, a wealthy Boston family, confronts old secrets when a stranger starts shooting a documentary in their town. Not a memorable book. Enjoyable while reading it, but I had to read the back of the book's blurb to remember the characters' names. The book switches between perspectives so none of the characters appear fully fleshed out, I didn't buy any of them. The precocious child, the rule-following patriarch, the fragile divorcee, the aimless daughter, the doped up childhood friend--I feel like I've read this book before.
—Kayla

Family struggles, characters collide, plot eventually moves forward. This book was slow to start, but once it did, swept along in directions I didn't think it would go. It takes a while for Shattuck to build her characters enough to set them in motion - and her multiple perspectives don't help - but once we learn them, they do start moving along unexpected paths. It was an entertaining book once I got through the first part - and until I got to the end. Shattuck can't be a mother, but she has done a wonderful job encapsulating the hearts and minds of all the other non-mother characters.
—jillian

This story took a while to crescendo, but boy once it got going, it was super well-orchestrated. Dysfunctional Boston Brahmins the Dunlops are headed by introverted father Jack who has alienated the rest of the family - ex-wife Faith is a quivering puddle of recovery in NYC, daughter Caroline is home after college but rather than tending to lost little brother Eliot she is distracted by a dashing cinematographer (who is not what he seems). I enjoyed how very sordid this puritanical story ended up becoming, and how the culture of "nobility" was found lacking when compared to such noble savages as Colombian nanny Rosita or Parisian one night stand Jean Pierre.
—Emi Bevacqua

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