Entertaining and well-written, but at times I disliked the main character
Warning: This review might contain what some people consider SPOILERS.
Rating: 9/10
PROS:
- All of the central characters seemed lifelike to me: the dialogue is realistically catty and lacks the wit and perfection that some authors are prone to, and Gulliver and every one of his friends/acquaintances/one-night-stands come across as really nice at some times and really jerky at others.
- The story takes you on a whirlwind ride through New York City--and not just the trendy parts or the parts you see as a tourist who’s there for a week. Gulliver lives in and travels to and parties through various areas in and around New York, and he describes the good, the bad, and the ugly details about each and every one of them.
- Zirilli’s writing style is heavy in metaphor and allusion, but not the subtle, “literary” type that students are forced to study in English literature classes. The writing here is sardonic, and Gulliver’s caustic comments and descriptions made me laugh on numerous occasions.
CONS:
- I didn’t always like Gulliver, so at times I had to force myself to continue reading about him. He’s petty and self-absorbed, so much so that I found myself a couple of times cheering for his adversaries rather than for him.
- The story is written in present tense, and as is often the case with such books, things get a bit muddled sometimes when past occurrences and flashbacks are being related.
Overall comments: I liked this overall, and I found it uncommonly funny. But if you’re not a fan of sexual escapades related in a flippant manner, you should probably stay away from this one. I’d guess that at least 50% of it concerns Gulliver’s conquests in the bedroom--and in back alleys, back rooms, and back…whatevers. Here’s how one character puts it near the end of the book: “That’s certainly not how I remember the story of Gulliver’s Travels. When I read it as a kid, there were fewer three-ways.”