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A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara is a critically acclaimed, emotionally intense novel chronicling the intertwined lives of four friends in New York City. With over 800 pages, it explores themes of trauma, friendship, and resilience, earning top ranks in Family Saga and Coming of Age fiction categories and boasting a 4.5-star rating from more than 88,000 readers.



| Best Sellers Rank | #498 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #6 in Family Saga Fiction #9 in Coming of Age Fiction (Books) #58 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 83,361 Reviews |
E**R
“Lost to the World”
I’ll be blunt upfront. A LITTLE LIFE (2015) by Hanya Yanagihara is the most soul-wrenching novel I have perhaps ever read. In the novel Yanagihara follows in minute detail the lives of four men who become friends, “a clique,” in college and continue to be close into their late fifties. JB Marion begins his work life as a “receptionist at a small but influential magazine based in SoHo that covered the downtown art scene,” with ambitions to become an artist. Fatherless since he was three, JB is of Haitian descent, tends toward being overweight, and is gay. Willem Ragnarsson, handsome and “liked by everyone” starts out as a waiter, but has his eye set on becoming a professional actor on stage and screen. In ways, Malcolm Irvine is the outlier of the group, still living at home with his parents who are a couple of mixed-race. He is wealthy and determined to become an architect. Malcolm appears to be oblivious of his appeal to others, even naïve, somewhat confused about his sexuality, and unmindful of his financial situation although generous to his friends and others when they are in need. At the core of the four friends is Jude St. Francis who holds the group together—not so much by what he does even though he is considerably bright, loyal, and hard-working, as well as determined to become a prosecutor, but because his friends care about him and Jude has needs. Parentless and with a mysterious past all of which he never speaks about and never having “a girlfriend or a boyfriend,” Jude has trouble with his legs and is frequently in pain. Although he never complains nor asks for help, his friends are very aware of his situation and go out of their way to assist Jude in as tactful of a manner as possible. Mainly set in New York City, as A LITTLE LIFE unfolds, Yanagihara brings into the fold other characters of importance including a doctor, Andy Contractor, and a former law professor, Harold Stein and his wife Judy, all of whom play important roles in in the novel, as well as a host of minor characters. It is, however, the four friends who remain central to the story, especially Jude and Willem, roommates in college and who remain the closest of the friends. The bulk of Yanagihara’s novel is told in chronicle order, but as the novel progresses, there are more flashbacks and memories, some of which get repeated with added detail as they surface, most of them revolving around Jude who becomes more and more the novel’s central character. When thinking about tragic characters in prose fiction, no one comes my mind as being more tragic than Jude Fawley from Thomas Hardy’s JUDE THE OBSCURE (1894/1895) which may be the motivation for the author’s name for her main character—Jude, “the patron saint of lost causes.” Although readers soon come to the realization Jude is a physically and emotionally scarred individual, Yanagihara’s revelations about the details of Jude’s history are painfully slow in coming—mirroring the complexity and rawness of those very memories which haunt and torment Jude. They are memories which have shaped, or rather distorted, his life. In one flashback the author reveals twenty-five years in the past, Ana, Jude's now deceased “first and only social worker” warning Jude during a hospital stay, “…you have to talk about these things while they’re fresh. Or you’ll never talk about them… and it’s going to fester inside you, and you’re always going to think you’re to blame. You’ll be wrong, of course, but you’ll always think it.” There are relatively few highs in Jude’s life and when they occur, the reader is bound to find them tearful moments of joy. The increasingly close friendship between Jude and Willem with both of them at the zenith of their careers is complex—filled paradoxically with the bounty which human relationships can contain along with enormous peril. Unfortunately, most of Jude’s life is a series of unrelenting, dreadful, terrifying, shattering lows and betrayals accompanied by self-destructive impulses which become worse and worse, adding to a man’s already burdensome childhood, youth, and life-long post-traumatic stress. Jude’s is a portrait of suffering beyond comprehension and the brutal perpetrators of his torments throughout his life are the epitome of unfathomable, monstrous human behavior. Thus, A LITTLE LIFE does not make for easy reading. It is emotionally jolting and at the same time riveting. So vivid are Yanagihara’s expose of the quartet of characters, the reader becomes one with them, making it a quintet. The author’s characters are real to life, the dialogue is vivid and genuine, and the quality of the writing as well as the tone of the novel is unswerving. Although Yanagihara’s central characters meet with sometimes staggering personal and professional successes, there are also failures and tragedies, both past and present, and always a dire cloud which encircles them all, especially Jude. Due to her immense and encompassing narrative skills, readers will eventually brace themselves so that whenever a horrifying revelation is made about Jude’s secret past or his present, there is likely worse to come. A narrative trick Yanagihara pulls a little over a quarter of the way into the novel and again at the half-way point, moving from an omniscient narrator to what clearly is a first person although not readily identifiable narrator, is bound to strike the reader as both curious and possibly even portentous. It is left up to the reader to recognize and interpret for themselves the meaning of the author’s temporary changes in point of view. She does the same switch near the book’s conclusion which eventually brings the work to its shocking climax and even more emotionally numbing, traumatic end. Clearly, A LITTLE LIFE is not for everyone. even though the novel is a modern masterpiece of writing and prose fiction and a work which will haunt the reader for a long time. The most resilient reader may very likely find there are times when they simply must close the book and exit the bleakness of the world Yanagihara creates before picking the book up again. Others may discover there are times when they simply want to throw the book across the room. Some readers may find the book impossible to finish because it is so emotionally draining. Regardless of the reader’s reaction to the novel, A LITTLE LIFE is an incredible accomplishment and a work which haunt the reader for a long time. [NOTES: (1) A LITTLE LIFE has recently been declared one of “The 20 Best Novels of the Decade” by Emily Temple for The Literary Hub on December 23, 2019. (2) The book’s cover photo is from a series of photos taken in the 1960s by Peter Hujar. The photo is titled “Orgasmic Man.” The photo is purposefully ambiguous. Is the man depicted experiencing joy or pain? (3) A stage adaptation of A LITTLE LIFE ran in Amsterdam in 2018 and 2019 with limited runs, only, most of which were in Dutch.]
G**A
woah
There are so many things I loved about this book, countered by so many things I hated. Yet, the beauty I saw in my head in the “happy years” and the emotions I felt, terrible and tragic, overcame the things I disliked about it. Leaving me thinking about this book nearly every single hour, every single day for the past month. Coincidentally, falling in love with it. Whilst horribly missing and feeling a sense of loss towards Willem and Jude. Though I thought some characters were 1 dimensional, I believe their two amazing characters had so much depth and personality that they shown against the others, making it worth while. I think some minor descriptions got repetitive and sometimes boring, which made it harder to get through the 814 pages, but in the end it was worth it. The final chapter was absolutely amazing, I have never read something that made me this emotional, all whilst tying up the text perfectly. I was able to recognize the many different meanings behind the title of the book, which was a heartbreaking experience for some of them, but I always love figuring out the titles significance to the text itself. Which this book does very well on. Now some reviews hate on this book for its continuous graphic content and repetitive unlikeness of Jude’s life. However I never felt this way. Sure it was hard to get through many sections about Jude’s past. But I don’t think they are used just to make us feel terrible. The created a story one in which we saw Jude carrying such weight for the 53 years of his life. One which that affected everything he did and everyone we loved. It did this in a way I haven’t seen a book do. And with the unlikeness of the events all happening in his life. Sure maybe every horrible thing that happened to him seemed unbelievable because how many traumatic things can happen to one guy? But how I saw it was, these things DO happen to people. R*pe, p*dophilia, s*x trafficking, kidnapping, car accidents, abusive relationships, loss, depression; and all of the other things Jude experienced. It’s not like someone who faces trauma in their life, only has one event happen and the rest of their lives runs smoothly. I also saw how Jude could be representing so many different people and different life experiences. For this reason this didn’t make it unbelievable to me in any way. The only way it is if you stay for narrowed and head on with the book, rather then thinking about bigger context; the issues in todays world, what people experience, and how he was a representation, representing all sorts of people in one character. It’s if I saw Jude as almost a metaphor. People also disagreed on the other extremity’s that took place, but on the other spectrum; success. All of the characters have an arch in their careers and all become super successful in their particular field. Even Jude, although he has had set back after set back. I think if the author had given Jude a mediocre life, or not have found his friends, and Harold and Julia, his adoptive parents, his career and life, he would have not made it as long as he did. Because mind me again, these things do happen to people, and are very hard to overcome. So Yanahigara, of course gave him this beautiful life, and all of his friends one. Too. But let’s not say it was without struggle. Jude struggles everyday with trauma and sadness, topped with self hatred, Jb struggled with a drug addiction, Willem didn’t get gig after gig and wondered about his competence, Malcolm didn’t make it for a while, under the pressure of his parents. Like real life there were setbacks for all of them, before they made it big. And what is unrealistic about making it big, when one you are passionate about what you love and two you went to a good university? I think it’s unfair to these people’s characters to say their lives became unrealistic either on the traumatic aspect or the success. Because success does in-fact happen for people too. Sure both may have seem over the top, but I also never felt this way. It was if the book was written to have two extremes on the spectrum, and show that even a beautiful life that is so big and grand full of everything anyone could want, received and deserved, not given, cannot heal such trauma from one’s life, making only but a little life.
B**D
A Large Story
Hanya Yanagihara's novel has been with me for almost three months now, so I began to truly feel subsumed by its halting, lilting textures and tones--the crystal-coated world, the fully-fleshed, exquisitely-crafted, haunted characters, the sheer beauty of the prose. The writing is almost mercenary--it drags you down its alleys, it sucks you into its breathless passages, it lights itself on fire, and while burning, jumps out of a plane, taking you with it hell or high water. It is a compelling read, not an easy feat at 700+ pages, and it will take over your life. And, it must be said, your emotional state. While A LITTLE LIFE structurally does at first resembles notable ensemble-after-college works by Meg Wolitzer or Claire Messed, the book is tricking you. It is very much about a man named Jude St. Francis (and the people who revolve around him), who overcomes astronomical odds of horrific physical, verbal, and sexual abuse to become a gleaming member of Manhattan's gilded class--a brilliant litigator, at a prestigious firm, with friends who are professors and artists, vacation homes, trips to Europe, even a loft on SoHo's Green street. Jude is certainly one of the most compelling creations I have read in recent fiction, and his story is all neo-grit-Dickensian, but Yanagihara's ambitions go beyond a mere portrait of a tormented soul. The brilliance of the book is that it attempts to show the effects of abuse on others, namely those who try to love Jude, in different ways, in different types of relationships, throughout his life. Some of these characters get a story of their own: certainly Willem, the midwesterner who loved his crippled brother more than his own parents did, and became, almost to his own surprise, a latter day movie star (Yanagihara has a lot of fun titling all his award-worthy films). And some characters get discarded, like Malcolm, the dissatisfied "starchitect", part of the original quartet of friends, who is virtually abandoned halfway through the story. Also, I never fully understood J.B., the self-serving, acerbic painter (again, the titles of his gallery shows are the stuff of genius). The novel, cleverly and effectively, is set in a dream parallel version of New York City, perhaps now, perhaps in the past, perhaps in the future. The only clue we get about the intersection of time and place is on a single page, when one of the characters says they need to go DOWNTOWN to get to the Whitney. Yanagihara, along the way, presents us with fascinating (and sometimes incredibly sad) side stories, some about Jude, some not, and we get broadly entertaining (and thoroughly, meticulously researched) scenes about the absurdities of the art world, the inner workings of law firms, Hollywood stardom, how doctors in various fields of medicine all view each other, the state of architecture, academia, and life at modern day orphanages, just to name a few examples. The novel is as wide-reaching as it is consuming. Possible spoilers may lie in wait here.. Where the novel fails for me is in its insistence on not exploring any gray areas. Characters are either saintly or evil, and the circuitry of the individual relationships (particularly those involving the friendships between men) didn't always ring true for me. Jude's suffering, while palpable, tragic, and harrowing, at times verged on TOO MUCH, in the way that Jack Bauer on the latter seasons of the TV show "24" (and his surrogate on "Homeland") seemed to just be repeating endless cycles of suffering. How could they never even have had a weekend break from getting tortured? How could one person suffer THAT MUCH? The answer is they can't, really. Jude, as a child, just seemed to steer from the clutches of one abuser into the hands of a worse abuser. And this goes on and on and yet he STILL manages to get into an Ivy League school where the hurt finally ends, but where the wounds only begin to heal. An extremely interesting but simultaneously ridiculous relationship depicted in the book is that between Jude and his lifelong friend and doctor, Andy, who drops everything he's doing, and thrusts himself at Jude with all his might in an effort to heal the un-healable. The man has a practice, a family, and yet his obsession with Jude (and others, too) borders on the inane. He treats Jude for years, desperately trying to save him from himself, showing up at his apartment, at his work, taking him to dinners, and never charging him a dime. The other major weakness in the book is an uncomfortable lapse or two (or three) into Lifetime movie territory. The long, pulsing sections where Jude, after overcoming so much, gets involved in a bizarre, abusive relationship with another prominent figure reads almost like a gay FATAL ATTRACTION. There is a Third Act car crash, untimely deaths, further failures and losses, that whirl and shock, and ultimately the book decides to sort of relent and admit what it's been all along: a beautifully-written, thoughtful, pulpy tragedy. No more, no less. Although, in a way, it is so much more. And worth your time. And yes, you will probably feel conflicted, as I was. Because as bright as this work shines, its flaws are pretty glaring too. Did it need to be so long? I think, perhaps, the book could have lost 150-200 pages and shined just as bright, but I also felt a careful editorship at work here, and I'm not sure, ultimately, a word could have been lost or changed. A LITTLE LIFE speaks to the vulnerabilities and fragility of humanity, on both sides of good and evil. In that way, life is always little. And precious. But creating a work of art sometimes seems guided by the constellations themselves--and therefore life, so little, can sometimes loom so large.
S**.
So Much More Than Fiction
I picked up my copy of A Little Life years ago, intent on reading it. As it neared the top of my TBR list, an already massive (and ever-growing) chorus of readers began labeling it: The Saddest Book Ever Written. “Sad” is a bit diffuse. Weak, even. People get sad when the holidays end and the monotony of life resumes. They complain of sadness on rainy days spent inside. The death of a goldfish is sad. Missing a friend who’s moved away is sad. The end of a good book is sad. Even Mondays evoke sadness in some. It’s a flimsy descriptor, and one worlds away from accurately describing the emotion depths of A Little Life. I’ve seen readers refer to this as “trauma porn”. I’m also aware some hated it (though not most). I can’t say why, nor do I much care. The enjoyment of art is subjective, and while I respect that an experience like A Little Life isn’t for everyone, particularly not casual readers, it is objectively and unarguably beautifully written. Hanya Yanagirhara is immensely skilled, both in the art of syntax and the dissection of the human experience. While I understand the knee-jerk reaction, this novel far exceeds the oversimplistic label. Certainly, no one can argue with the assertion that this book is sad. But as a victim of serious trauma, A Little Life proved profoundly touching and deeply important. My childhood severely stunted my emotional development. While having a high level of emotional intelligence, it wasn’t until my forties that I began experiencing the emotions that invariably coincide with trauma like mine. I was numb, utterly and completely. I would retell horrid, tragic accounts without a lick of emotion, or even an awareness of how deranged these experiences sounded to others. I wasn’t aware I should’ve felt something. Hell, anything. Instead, I misread my emotional apathy as good mental health. Even now, I’m still largely numb to the memories, but cracks have formed, and through those the terrible weight of what I’ve endured has begun to show itself. Reading A Little Life might seem counterintuitive for someone like me, but on the contrary, it felt cathartic. Yanagirhara’s intensive exploration of Jude allowed me to feel in ways I never have, putting to words the magnitude of experiences I still can’t fully emotionally process. I’m not healed. I don’t believe trauma survivors ever heal entirely. If they’re lucky, they develop healthier relationships with their pain. But this book put deep trauma on display, splayed open its belly, exposed every nerve, and waded through its far-reaching ramifications with painstaking accuracy and honesty. I borrowed from Jude’s insights, and in doing so learned a bit about myself. This book is doing far more for readers than just making them “sad”. As for the story itself, this book is brutal. It’s not something to flippantly open because BookTok recommended it, nor is it a mountain you climb without intention. But the characters are stunning and genuine. The love shared between them is earnest and healing. And it’s as much about love and acceptance as it is about pain. Moreso, in fact. A stunning piece of literature. And hands down, one of the best books I’ve ever read. If not THE best.
B**A
can my heart be fixed? The story tore me apart.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️✨ (4.5 stars) A Little Life is one of those books that settles deep into your bones and refuses to leave. Jude’s story is heartbreak in its purest form—tragic, heavy, and painfully raw. His pain unfolds in layers, and even when you think it can’t get worse, it somehow does. This book truly hurt to read at times, but in a way that felt meaningful rather than gratuitous. Willem, though—what an absolute gift of a character. He is kindness personified, the kind of person everyone deserves in their life. His love, loyalty, and gentleness feel like a safe place, not just for Jude but for the reader as well. He’s the reminder that even in the darkest moments, there can still be goodness. This story once again drove home the idea that family isn’t always the one you’re born into, but the one you build. The friendships and chosen family in this book are what make the heartbreak survivable and the story so powerful. I knocked off half a star only because the beginning was genuinely hard to get through. The start was slow, and the point of view shifts were confusing at first since it didn’t immediately clarify whose perspective you were in. I also usually hate flashbacks—but surprisingly, I loved how they were done here. They were woven in so thoughtfully, giving you glimpses of the past without fully revealing everything. Those little “six years ago” blanks keep you moving forward, curious and uneasy, and add so much emotional depth to the story. Devastating, beautiful, and unforgettable—this book is an emotional commitment, but one that stays with you long after the final page.
L**A
Jude, you were incredible in every way.
"There seemed to be an inevitability to this, to his life: that every year he would become worse - more disgusting, more depraved. Every year, his right to humanness diminished, every year, he became less and less of a person." - Oh Judy I hate that you felt this way, my heart still aches for you. You were so MUCH MORE than what was done to you. You were such a bright light in so many people's lives, I only wish you could've seen what you meant to them all. If only you could've seen yourself the way they all saw you. My heart is utterly shattered, my soul is gutted and my mind is blown. I have never read a book like this and don't think I will ever encounter such a beautifully tragic book again. This book is hard to get through, not because it isn't extremely well written (because it most definitely is) but because it deals with such hard topics from beginning to end. I will never forget Jude, Willem, Malcom or JB. Their unconditional love for one another (even during their fallouts) was magical. These four men will live rent free in my mind and will forever have a corner of my heart along with a piece of my soul. Harold, Julia, Richard, Lucien and Andy will all reside in my heart for the rest of time as well. All of these characters were heroes. They never gave up on Jude and they never for one second let him forget that he was loved, that he was cherished. Even in those moments where he couldn't believe it, they were there. They never wavered, if only all of us could be lucky enough to have a Willem, Malcom and JB in our lives, a Harold, Julia, Richard, Lucien and Andy in our lives. I don't think I've ever cried so much while reading a book and going into this book blind probably wasn't the brightest idea but I am glad that I didn't look up any of the trigger warnings (although in hindsight I probably should've) because it allowed me to dive head first into Jude's world. I felt everything so strongly and will never forget this story. It has etched itself onto me and will always be part of me. I can't imagine I'll ever be able to let go of any of these characters. As I sit here with tears still streaking my cheeks I can't help but hope that somewhere out there Jude and Willem and Malcom and JB are somehow reunited. That the four of them can continue to be a unit forming new memories and loving each other unconditionally for who they are. At least in my head that's how I will always remember them, laughing and loving. Brother Luke, Dr. Traylor and Caleb were despicable. So were all the other men who had a hand in harming Jude. I hated them with every fiber of my being. They were cowards and don't deserve to be called men. They are trash. Nothing more. I wanted to throw the book across the room every time pieces of his past were revealed instead I screamed at these horrible men again and again until I got it out of my system enough to be able to continue on. Jude deserved so much better than what these cowards did to him. My only source of peace is that his friends loved him far beyond what he ever knew, what he ever thought possible even when he was at his lowest and that even though he never accepted that they were there to stay forever they stood by him until the very end. My heart grew three sizes throughout his journey. It also broke into a billion pieces throughout his journey. "Willem, I think I turned out pretty normal, all things considered, don't you?" "No, I think you turned out extraordinary, all things considered or not." ^ I agree completely with you Willem. Jude St. Francis you were an extraordinary man who accomplished great things. You were an amazing lawyer and man. You were a wonderful friend and son. You loved so deeply. If I could give this book an infinite amount of stars I would. Lastly, I'd like to add a thank you to the author. Hanya Yanagihara, thank you for writing Jude's story. Thank you for doing it with grace and respect. Thank you for writing a story that has impacted me so greatly. And finally, thank you for sharing your talent with the world. You are an incredibly talented writer and I am glad I came across your work.
E**E
I really wanted to love this book
While there was much I liked about this novel, there was also much I disliked. As many reviewers have said, it could have easily been at least 200 pages shorter without losing any impact. SPOILERS AHEAD What I liked: The first quarter of the book, which detailed their early adulthood. The descriptions of what it feels like to be suicidal, even though you want for nothing, were valuable. The insights into such depressive thinking, and how childhood abuse can color a person's entire future, were well-written and definitely made me ponder these issues in new ways. I enjoyed reading about adult characters who feel complete without having children, and for whom friends become family. I found this to be refreshing. The writing style appeals to me. I really liked Ms. Yanagihara's first book, The People in The Trees, and will no doubt buy her next as well, regardless of how I felt about A Little Life. What I disliked: I read the book over a short period of time (a few days), but if I hadn't done so, I would never have been able to keep all the characters straight. There were many who added almost nothing to the story. Remembering whether Phillipa was someone from their college dorm versus a past girlfriend, etc., would have been impossible if I'd read this over the course of a month. Having most character names be unusual did help a bit. The book is presented in the media (and in blurbs) as if it were going to be the story of 4 men. It's not. It's the story of Jude, and sort-of the story of Willem. I don't know if Ms. Yanagihara originally intended to feature JB and Malcolm more but realized the book would be 1500 pages if she did, or whether the blurbs are intentionally misleading. I suppose if the blurbs and media soundbites were truthful about the sexual abuse aspect, the book might not sell. So maybe this is the fault of the publisher's marketing department. Either way, until I was 3/4 of the way done, I kept waiting for the story to switch over to JB or Malcolm and of course it never did. The fact that all the characters were so unbelievably successful seemed absurd. And while I understood Jude's financial motivation for going to work at a large law firm with brutal hours, by the age of 45 he would have had all the money he'd ever need. It seemed that if he were such a wonderful, giving, loving person, that he would have moved on to working for non-profits or some such (or gone back to the US Attorney's office). And while near the end of the novel it's mentioned that he still does the art pro-bono work, that seems contradicted by all the earlier passages about how he works at the firm around 20 hours a day. I found it increasingly hard to understand why Jude's closest friends/family liked him so much - enough to go to such extreme lengths to try to help him. Is anyone truly this saint-like? And WHY did they adore him so? It felt like there was too much 'telling' and not enough 'showing.' I kept wishing for more dialogue, for more scenes that brought me into the room, into the action. Instead, I felt like I was observing from a remove. Perhaps this was the author's intention - but it made for a less-immersive reading experience. I'm sure this next criticism is peevish on my part, but it bugged me that the college they attended was not named. How hard is it to say "Harvard" or "Williams" or just make up a fictional school? The fact that it went unnamed felt like an affectation. Perhaps Ms. Yanagihara was trying to convey universality - to show that no matter where you go, you bond with roommates? The fact that the action is not anchored in time was another problem for me. Mainly because it seemed insane that a beautiful abandoned infant would have no takers. ("Healthy white baby, 5 years?! What else you got?" - Raising Arizona) Maybe during the depression, or the 1800's, I could believe that an infant would just be given to a monastery - but not any time from the 1960's on. Ditto for the boys' home Jude later goes to - it's much more likely, no matter where he was, that he'd enter the foster care system. I really wanted to love this book - and I feel like it could've been something I loved. I get the sense from others' reviews that I'm not the only one. I'm conflicted about recommending it to my friends.
K**S
Unlike Any Book Out There-
This review was meant to be an email to Hanya but emails are apparently hard to come across these days. I have just finished this book and now understand why it had taken 18 months to compile. Hanya was not just writing a book about abuse and trauma; she was writing about life itself. She managed to rip life from life and slap it into a book, which is a pretty amazing feat. This story was raw, fleshy and unforgettable. I think what made it so special was how Hanya put forth the effort to make character development a key part of the story. Willem, Jude, JB, Malcolm, Julia, Harold, everyone was three dimensional and real. It wasn't even like I was reading this story, I was submerged in it. This book wasn't easy and i can say that my heart melted, my hands shook and I had to close the book in anger more times than I can count. But that's what made it so hauntingly beautiful. It had such a strong effect on me that through the blurry eyes and runny nose I had to keep pushing forth in hopes of reaching some conclusion. I was pained not because of what I was reading, but by what I was feeling. When Jude suffered, I suffered. When Jude reflected on different parts of his past, I pleaded with him to not think so harshly of himself. And when Willem died I crumbled and cried with Jude. And when Jude finally die I missed a friend. This book is figuratively the first book I have ever read. Sure I have read the classics and highly acclaimed novels but this book has been a game changer. It's poignant and tragic and beautiful and unlike any book out there. When I look back, I'm filled with sad nostalgia because I know I will not feel this strongly about a book for a long time. I never pictured any of the characters dying the way they did. But this book was not about ending perfectly or even near perfect. This book was life. An example of how life never works out the way it should, about how people are dealt hands they don't deserve and about how loving and caring for someone isn't always enough. When Willem died I saw the snow globes that captured scenes from Willem and Jude's life shake and shatter. It was always just the two of them for decades. They had gone through hardships and struggles and Willem dying was truly the beginning of the end for Jude. And I knew that but chose not to believe it just like Harold knew and Andy and everyone who loved Jude that as much as they wanted to ignore it, Jude would never be fixed. In conclusion to this story, that is going to put me in a depression for weeks to come, I have learned a few things. Sexual abuse and violence often come hand and hand and those who suffer through it are those who deserve it the least. I learned that life purposely puts specific people in certain places at exact times so that they will meet and change the course of each others lives forever. And I have learned that we all know a Jude. In one way or another we all have a Jude who doesn't want to be helped, fixed, loved, touched or pitied. This boy, this Murphy's law, was beautiful. Even though he couldn't see it or believe it we all saw it. And we all see the Jude's around us as beautiful, beautiful people. It's tragic that Jude was the only one unable to realize his worth. His little life, impacted everyone around him. He was their sun. That's what I believe and will continue to believe as this story is dissected and devoured by readers across the world. A Little Life deserves recognition for its beauty and enigma that everyone has to read in order to solve.
J**A
Wrecked me in the best possible way.
First things first, I think this is the best written book I've ever read (maybe that doesn't say a lot because I mostly read YA romances or thrillers - but still, the writting on this book is amazing and anyone can attest to that). Second, oh where to begin... I can see why people either hate or love this book. In life, you encounter people with different approaches to life - some may choose to look at the positive side of things, others get a little stuck on the negatives - with this book is no different. Yes, there's a sequence of tragedies and inimaginable horrors and you can get stuck on that, but, like myself, you can extract SO MANY great things from this book, I chose to look at it as story about love (and not necessarily romantic love). The author managed to put into words thoughts that I had throughout my life about relationship, friendship, adulthood, parenthood, death and, as a lawyer, even the law. All the characters are well built, even if you don't go too deep in their past, there's background enough to understand why they are the way they are, why they struggle with what they struggle. I went in prepared to cry, but by the last page I was sobbing so hard I felt like I was going to throw up. Since then I carry the characters close to my heart and think about them every single day. I'm grateful for the opportunity to know their story. Jude, you will stick with me forever.
E**N
A little life novel
Perfect condition🥰🥰🥰
P**O
Great novel
A great novel
K**A
Bueno
Gran libro
D**O
Denisse filpo
Una edición preciosa para un libro profundamente emotivo. A Little Life me ha tocado el corazón de una forma que pocos libros logran. La historia es dura, humana y absolutamente inolvidable. Esta edición aniversario tiene una calidad excelente y vale totalmente la pena. Lo recomiendo si buscas una lectura intensa y conmovedora.
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