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| Random Acts of Heroic Love | 
enlarge | Author: Danny Scheinmann Publisher: Black Swan Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £7.98 (100%)
New (43) from £0.79
Avg. Customer Rating: 83 reviews Sales Rank: 338
Media: Paperback Pages: 432 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 4.8 x 1.1
ISBN: 0552774227 EAN: 9780552774222 ASIN: 0552774227
Publication Date: January 1, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
Breathtaking September 21, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I finished Random Acts last weekend and it's one of those rare books that stays with you long after you've finished it. I still find it creeping into my thoughts. At first I was reading Leo's story as the predominant one but as Moritz's one took over I found myself absolutely addicted to it. I often check the amount of pages left in a book to estimate what might happen, but I read each one thoroughly wishing it not to end. Indeed the story in the book of the journey versus the destination was how I read it from then on. I absolutely adored it, and when I've got the emotional strength to read it again I definitely will, which is again rare for me to do. I would recommend this not just as a romantic novel but a life lessons one which I'd say almost anyone will enjoy. Have to go now as I'll probably start crying again if I think about it too much. Enjoy.
Amazing September 19, 2008 A real story of love. Moritz is determined to find his lost love, Lotte. He endures real hardship along the way.Elsewhere, Leo is mourning the loss of Eleni, his one true love. Leo goes on a journey and makes a discovery that will change his life. The hidden connections between these two men are heartwarming. I really enjoyed this book, beautifully written, tender and very moving. It really draws you in.
Wonderful but .... September 17, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is Danny Scheinmann's debut novel. He has a terrific story to tell. Born in 1896 in Ulanov, a small village close to the Russian border, at 16 years old, Moritz Daniecki falls in love with Lotte Steinberg. He the son of a cobbler, she the daughter of a wealthy fur trader. They share one kiss and promise themselves to each other, despite knowing that their circumstances will never permit marriage. When war is declared he is sent to The Front. Finally, after many hardships and great suffering, he is abandoned in Siberia and, with Lotte's memory to sustain him, he begins the long walk home, a journey that will take years and one that will test his courage, his love and his endurance. Wonderful. BUT .... this story more than stands up for itself, why then muddy the waters with the story of Leo Deakin, a young man who loses the love of his life in a terrible accident while back-packing in South America? Leo Deakin is not a sympathetic character and I found myself unable to warm towards him. I think DS made a mistake in using a parallel story to illustrate the extraordinary events of his grandfather's life because this was the lifeblood of the book and made it worth every moment of the time spent reading it. I think Scheinmann was not best-served by his editor. A good read that could have been better.
A little syrupy in parts but not too bad September 16, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I picked up this book in a charity shop and almost put it down as it had a sticker on it as a recommended Richard and Judy book. I decided to put aside my prejudice and bought it. It was an average read in all respects. There are two stories in one here. The first concerns a young Polish Jew who ends up in Siberia during the First World War and tells the tale of his epic walk across Siberia and Russia to get back home to his childhood sweetheart. The second story takes place in the 1990's and chronicles the story of a young man's bereavement when his girlfriend dies after a road crash in Ecuador. This part of the story is irritating and cloying. I just couldn't really empathise with his refusal to accept that death is part of life and his tedious and interminable navel-gazing with a mysterious Italian philosopher/physicist was so adolescent. Now and again we have pictures of animals and aphorisms that he has torn from books that are meant to show us universal truths. Oh dear, that really is annoying! Altogether, an average read. But I know it will appeal to sentimental readers. I am not hard-hearted, but it didn't do a lot for me. Next time I will resist the urge to pick up a Richard and Judy book!
A heartwarming tale September 15, 2008 Scheinmann's story of love and loss is truly heartwarming in itself, but it is when you learn of his own link to the two intertwining stories that you realise the real significance of the book as a whole. This book kept me turning the pages until I found the answers that I was looking for.
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