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The Moon and Sixpence - Community Reviews back

by W. Somerset Maugham
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Major Leser
Major Leser rated it 11 years ago
This book did not age well. The rampant racism and sexism that are a sign of the times Maugham lived in make this Künstlerroman unbearable in several places. Plus for a fairly short book, there's a surprising amount of filler.
Regina's Reads
Regina's Reads rated it 12 years ago
Moon and Sixpence is a beautifully written novel about a very ugly person. I do not mean physically, but rather spiritually. The novel is loosely based on the life of the artist Paul Gaugin. The setting is a combination of London, Paris and Tahiti during the late 1800s and is told through the thi...
I'm Reading...
I'm Reading... rated it 13 years ago
Other thoughts/reviews:Col Reads: http://colreads.blogspot.be/2012/07/book-review-moon-and-sixpence-by-w.html
A Man With An Agenda
A Man With An Agenda rated it 13 years ago
I picked up 'The Moon and Sixpence' a few years ago at a library book sale thinking, purely from the cover image and my limited knowledge of when Maugham wrote, that it was a novel about the Pacific in World War II. It turns out I was way off. Which is fine by me since I wasn't eager to read a novel...
Lavinia
Lavinia rated it 16 years ago
What it takes to be a real artist is debatable. A sudden urge to create, an invincible desire to stay away from anything that’s mundane (that includes your current job) and keeps you away from your true calling – I can take that. But leaving everything behind, i.e. spouse and children, and completel...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 16 years ago
I make no secret of my liking of the W. Somerset Maugham ouevre and this, dear friends did not disappoint. My cover:The novel inspired by the life of Paul Gauguin.
debnance
debnance rated it 16 years ago
The main character of this book, Charles Strickland, was a thoroughly unlikeable fellow. His departure from home left his first wife in despair. He took up with a woman in Paris and destroyed her life. It was only when he went to Tahiti that he found a haven for his art and lifestyle. That Stricklan...
wealhtheow
wealhtheow rated it 19 years ago
This wasn't the absolute perfection that was The Razor's Edge, and yet it was still better than 99.9% of the books out there. It is a testament to Maugham's talents that although I have never given a damn about Paul Gauguin, I loved this book.
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