Loved this book. This first-time author told a beautiful story beautifully.
A few reviewers have complained that the narrator goes into too much detail about "irrelevant things," talking about the back story of everyday items. For me, however, this is exactly in character with how a person like the narrator would approach the world. Here is a kid who spent the first 6-7 years of his life in abject poverty in a then-poverty-ridden country, who suddenly gets thrust into middle class America. He spends basically the rest of his life decoding things, whether it's everyday items, social interactions, status symbols within different classes of people, etc. For the narrator, this approach to detail is more than just a survival skill; it is what allowed him to rise meteorically in the business world. So no, it may not be how most readers approach the world (or how most novelists approach writing), but it is incredibly true to the narrator's relationship with the world and its everyday items, and the focus on these items and their back story made the book feel even more authentic to me.
I could not put this book down. The story is tremendously compelling -- simultaneously heartbreaking and uplifting. I have to admit, for part of the book I was questioning all the jumping around in time, but the payoff in the end, when the storylines come together, makes it worth it. All in all, it's a story that will stay with you long after you finish the book, and it has a good chance of being a blockbuster movie some day if done right. I highly recommend it.