Running in the Family |  | Creator: Michael Ondaatje Publisher: Random House Audio Category: Book
List Price: $18.00 Buy Used: $7.48 You Save: $10.52 (58%)
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Rating: 30 reviews Sales Rank: 2117816
Format: Abridged, Audiobook Media: Audio Cassette Number Of Items: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.4 x 0.8
ISBN: 0679449124 Dewey Decimal Number: 920 EAN: 9780679449126 ASIN: 0679449124
Publication Date: October 8, 1996 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Former library copy, tapes in very good condition but box is marked.
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Product Description 2 cassettes / 3 hours Read by Michael Ondaatje
"Michael Ondaatje is here at his agile and evocative best . . . Brightly colored, sweet and painful, bloody-midned and otherworldly, [Running in the Family] achieves the status of legend." -Margaret Atwood
In the late 1970s, Michael Ondaatje returned to his native island of Sri Lanka.Recording his journey through he druglike heat and intoxicating fragrances of the "pendant off the ear of India", Ondaatje simultaneously retraces the baroque mythology of his Dutch-Ceylonese family.It is a story of broken engagements and drunken suicide attempts, of parties where exquisitely dressed couples tango in the jungle, a tale whose actors pursue lives of Baudelairean excess with impeccable decorum.
Lyrical and witty, tragic and deliriously romantic, Running in the family is an inspired marriage of travel narrative andfamily memoir by one of our most eloquent and poetic writers.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 25 more reviews...
A Favorite Memoir September 13, 2008 I thoroughly enjoyed this book for its exotic locale and irreverent description of the author's own family. In fact, it made me laugh out loud in places.
Irritating January 2, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Ondaatje seems to be trying too hard. The language is overly flowery and the plot is often lost beneath the mound of words. It does have a few good moments, some funny, some touching. But in general, I spent most of this book irritated by the grandois manner of the author, as if by writing in a vague and pretty-fied manner, his words will sound important and deep. Maybe it's just me, but I find that vague does NOT equal meaningful.
Remembering Family December 8, 2006 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
I read this book for a Canadian fiction class and really liked it. The language was so interesting and different from anything I had read before. It is a wonderful story about a wacky family. There are good times, bad times, funny stories, tragic stories, and just plain wacky events. It really makes you want to take a look into your own family and find out all of the "juicy" details. I really liked the book and I would recommend it to anyone looking for an interesting story.
hit and miss. October 23, 2006 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
fans of michael ondaatje's poetry will no doubt like this book; however, do to the hit and miss nature of each chapter, i doubt that this book would win him many new fans. an impressionistic collage of place & family members, this book is closer to the ethic of poetry, forsaking narrative structure for short pieces that jump here and there to paint a family in an exotic place and time. plenty of good prose, but lots of the pieces are too random and are just not interesting. worthwhile, but not highly recommended.
Pictures of yesterday March 8, 2004 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
Considering that this is in fact an autobiograpy, one can not judge it's contents. After all, you can not judge ones life, either you like it or not in a sense of discussing literature. But, what you can discuss is the manner in which that biography is written. Ondaatje present's life of his family trough generations who lived on Ceilon (Shri Lanka), in a series of random images, which are more like picture, than prose. Many times he stops to grasp certain individual and present his little history, his life, which than influenced the rest of the family in some perverse way. When reading this book, experienced reader will find such compositions that corresponds in that what crtics call 'modern', others will find interesting and compelling story, which never grows in boredom, with fluent narrative style that keeps ones eyes fixed on pages long after the lights went out. Comparing the Ondaatje with other authors of the modern world, Ondaatje lacks the one thing that he "must" have when presenting himself in a way he does. By focusing himself merely on a problems of his own, of a personal character in every (which, of course, includes this one)book, he voluntarily forgets that there is other life, other world going around him. When tending to write intelectual prose, one should, at least in one way, give some focus on that matter too. But, when all this comes to conclusion, if you like (auto)biograhies - buy this one, if you don't, skip it. It's simple as that...
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