Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You
IN RE: James Sveck–eighteen-year-old New Yorker, charming, precocious, confused, doesn’t quite fit in (doesn’t really want to), If: his future (i.e., college) seems completely meaningless, not to mention terrifying . . . Then: he’ll start anew (move to the Midwest?).In re: James...
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IN RE: James Sveck–eighteen-year-old New Yorker, charming, precocious, confused, doesn’t quite fit in (doesn’t really want to), If: his future (i.e., college) seems completely meaningless, not to mention terrifying . . . Then: he’ll start anew (move to the Midwest?).In re: James Sveck–misunderstood by a capricious mother, a self-absorbed father, a mordant older sister,Et alia: his Teutonic therapist, his D-list celebrity grandmother, his unnervingly attractive art gallery colleague . . . If: What one wants is enigmatic . . . Then: Life can be hell.But: as the summer gets hotter, James comes to recognize the wrenching truth of his emotions. James’s archly comic bravado fuels this sharply observed novel of a teen adrift in an adult world, struggling to make sense of the problems of love and of lack. The engaging voice of our idiosyncratic antihero is deftly captured by the adroit prose of Peter Cameron. Often hilarious, deeply compassionate, smart, and lyrical, Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You is every bit as sui generis as James Sveck himself. See also: Brown University; Sexual orientation (confusion thereof); Dinner theater; Poodles (standard).
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Format: audiobook
ISBN:
9780739372890 (0739372890)
Publish date: November 25th 2008
Publisher: Listening Library (Audio)
Edition language: English
Senso di sospensione. Poi un pensiero si fa strada e mi chiedo chi è disadattato. James? Forse. O forse lo sono gli altri con i loro fallimenti, le loro insoddisfazioni, i loro pregiudizi, i loro capricci. James si ribella a tutto questo. Semplicemente non sopporta la superficialità, la stupidità, l...
I loved this book, discovered it while working on a project on Stephen Elliott. Someone recommended Someday to further understand Elliott's "Where I Slept" essay. I don't quite see the connection but I'll never be sorry for following up that lead and reading this book.One of my favorite bits: ""But ...
What the hell kind of ending was that? >8(
This book reminded me a little of Catcher in the Rye. I hated Catcher in the Rye. But this was a little better.
I'm getting pickier about YA lit these days, but I really enjoyed this one. Definitely reminiscent of The Catcher in the Rye -- the protagonist, James Sveck, is basically a somewhat-closeted gay Holden Caulfield -- but I loved Catcher, so I thought this was great too.