The stories deal with the consequences of transplanting a family, an English girl spending a month with a family in France, a biologist rooming with a compulsive liar, and more About the Paul Theroux's highly acclaimed novels include Blinding Light, Hotel Honolulu, My Other Life, Kowloon Tong, and The Mosquito Coast. His renowned travel books include Ghost Train to the Eastern Star, Dark Star Safari, Riding the Iron Rooster, The Great Railway Bazaar, The Old Patagonian Express, and The Happy Isles of Oceania. He lives in Hawaii and on Cape Cod.
Paul Edward Theroux is an American travel writer and novelist, whose best known work is The Great Railway Bazaar (1975), a travelogue about a trip he made by train from Great Britain through Western and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, through South Asia, then South-East Asia, up through East Asia, as far east as Japan, and then back across Russia to his point of origin. Although perhaps best known as a travelogue writer, Theroux has also published numerous works of fiction, some of which were made into feature films. He was awarded the 1981 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for his novel The Mosquito Coast.
Paul Theroux is a very talented writer. He writes excellent stories, he's written some good novels, and he used to write good travel books too. I've enjoyed plenty of them over the years. Who am I ? I am just a reader out there in small town Massachusetts who's had a few experiences in life and who likes to read books about faraway places, or maybe about the human comedy. I'm not a hot-shot critic. I can't expound on the literary qualities of this or that writer with the expertise gleaned from English departments, because I didn't attend any courses in those English departments. But life is in the eye of the beholder. As Mr. Theroux has grown older, his view of life has become more and more pessimistic. Nothing gives him pleasure, everything leads to disappointment, failure, and frustration. He sees many people trying to make up for the nature of his world through lies, delusions, and retreat. He has become a man who sees only the garbage on the beach of life. All relationships must end badly in this world---they are disappointing right from the start usually. The maggot of indecision and betrayal always appears, it can be squeezed and ejected from under the skin as in the story "White Lies", but never avoided. Your closest friends and heroes will fall short of your expectations, your loves will fade, and nothing can replace them. Life---in these stories---is indeed a rotten, desperate situation. But at least, Theroux can write about it, tear it apart, and send it out in sad, unpleasant little pieces. Even if it's your old friend and mentor, you can turn on him and publish a whole book telling us what a rat he always was. Maybe he was. If I ever met Mr. Theroux, I'd make like "Roadrunner" and disappear in a flash, rather than risk winding up a crabbed, contemptible suburbanite in some story. OK, these are my remarks. If you've read this far, then I can tell you that taking into account these feelings of mine, there are some excellent stories in this collection, though some are not up to his usual high standard. "The Odd-Job Man", about an American academic in England, "The Greenest Island", a long story about an inexperienced American youth in Puerto Rico, and "Clapham Junction", a short but powerful story about the depths of human foibles stand out. Personally, I think you'd do better with "The Consul's File" or with some of the earlier novels. If you already know Theroux and like his style, you'll probably find this collection excellent. I find his view of the world too jaundiced, too cynical, too negative. The brightest day, the happiest moment, the most beautiful scene always carries a vague menace and the seed of major failure. I agree that it is possible, but always ???
Paul Theroux is better known for his travel writing, but he is also a master of prose - especially the short form, as found in this collection of stories. The title story was movingly magnificent; others made me think of Somerset Maugham (especially 'White Lies'); and though one or two didn't work tremendously well ('The English Adventure' was tame; and 'The Imperial Icehouse' recycled a trope visited in 'The Mosquito Coast') on the whole this is a stunningly good collection. I read it in two days, and wish I could just start again from the beginning right now.
The man can write. I don't always like short stories and some of these are really short. I often find them ending abruptly but not so much with this collection. One theme that repeats is the human need to impress others, not with what we do but who we know. Why??? How did that ever even start? It's a cringey thing to read about, but it's real.
Bought this at a charity shop in Highgate during my Capital Ring walk. The stories are very redolent of the early 70s literary scene in all don. There’s a portrait of a racist Jean Rhys that is not at all disguised. Some are entertaining, but they’re rather dated now. Not sure many of them will be read for much longer. His worldview is generally bitter and disappointed
Overpowering collection of stories that seems to be unafraid of detailing the deepest sensitivities in some people while exposing the worst hubris in others. One story, "After the War", manages to do both at once. Theroux has so many voices and personalities to all the characters, it's an enjoyable ride through a vast world of stories. Unfortunately yet bravely, most of them contain a lot of sadness and solitude.
This collection of short stories is supposed to be tied together by a diversity of places, but it's more the inherent sadness of the characters that is the thread that carries through. Each, of course, sad in their own way; some aren't sad in the truly unhappy sense but in the "reader looking at their life" sense.
As an introduction to Theroux this might discourage readers, but each story, on its own, is so well crafted (except perhaps "The Greenest Isle") that if readers take their time - perhaps spacing the stories out - they'll appreciate his writing more. (Note: "Zombies" is not a nod to the latest paranormal craze!)
This collection of 14 short stories has it all. Expect to find flawed characters challenged by their own conscious, their environment, or the company they choose to keep. Many of the shorter stories are forgettable, but there are a couple grotesque ones that will stick with me. The reason why I gave this book 4 stars is because Theroux saved the best for last: The Greenest Island, where two characters barely in their 20's flee the United States for Puerto Rico, only to find that a change in setting doesn't give then the happiness they are looking for. Really a great short story.
Character sketches that reveal human nature in a way that feels at once familiar and revelatory. Some observations are compelling but the stories are not always that engaging as a whole.
In the story of a novice smuggler waiting in Paris for his cargo, Theroux notes that being an adult does not mean we are l any less impatient than we were as children; rather, the dignity of adulthood is the ability to conceal that impatience.
Theroux is the genius author of The Mosquito Coast which was made into a movie directed by Peter Wier and starring Harrison Ford at his acting pinancle. The movie bombed at the box office but was loved by the critics. Worls End is a collection of short stories which are eclectic to say the least. A strange unusual read. Not his best.
I read this long ago, but remember being disappointed. I was introduced to Theroux through his travel writing and really liked his novel “The Mosquito Coast”-- I know I have it stored away in a box somewhere??