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I am reading it for my book club so I have to complete it. I am interested in the outcome but I wish it would get to the point quicker. Actually it is like watching someone else's home movies. I am not quite finished reading it yet; I keep hoping it will pick up. It is highly detailed-more than is necessary.
Mr. Two the writing seemed to repeat - there was one $1 word that got used three times in about as many pages. Drawing from Hamlet, Wroblewski tells of a family who has raised very special dogs for several generations. Edgar has never spoken despite having no medically proven reason for the condition. One, I had no idea what was going to happen. I needed to re-read several passages near the end of the book to make sure I understood what happened. A page turner for sure.
The ending confused me for two reasons. I loved most of this book.
What is obvious to Edgar is not always obvious to his mother or the reader. He develops his own illustrations through his words.
Edgar provides a unique technique to the highly trainable dogs. Wroblewski does not rely on trite phrases.
I would still recommend this book, but the ending has me puzzled about how I feel about the book as a whole. He communicates with his family and the dogs through sign language.
I knew who the antagonist was but I was not prepared for the climax of the book.
Wrong. I only finished this book because I hoped that the ending would justify the 600 pages of turgid prose. There are better books about dogs, about boys and their dogs, about mute boys, about hatred and revenge.better books emerging from MFA workshops, better books recommended by Oprah, better books. From now on I'm going to read the acknowledgments first before buying--chances are, if the author thanks all his classmates in his MFA program, the book will exhibit all the traits of workshopped-over prose: ambling sentences, attempts at "deep meaning," a contrived borrowing of other literary texts (in this case, Hamlet). That's certainly the case with The Story of Edgar Sawtelle.
Now there would be a story. The ending left me drained and wondering what happened to Trudy. What about Henry and the two dogs he adopted. I was eager to read this book; the reviews alone were intriguing. Maybe these two could come together and rebuild the Sawtelle dog legacy. There was no explanation for Claude's hatred of his brother and I don't recall Edgar hearing the real story of how his parents met. However, I have a tendancy to agree with some of the other comments regarding the mystery surrounding the characters. Somewhere in the middle of the book while Edgar was on the run, I found myself running from the book as well in the form of speed reading; I just couldn't get past that section fast enough.
I kept waiting through the entire book and was terribly disappointed. Be forwarned that nothing good ever happens. I am obsessed with dogs and am always trying to interpret what they are thinking. I hated this book.
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