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• Hornby, Nick
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• Lad Lit
Contemporary Fiction: 1970 Onwards
A Long Way Down
A Long Way Down

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Author: Nick Hornby
Publisher: Viking
Category: Book

Buy Used: £0.01



New (6) Collectible (3) from £0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 83 reviews
Sales Rank: 190123

Media: Paperback
Edition: Export / Airside Ed
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6 x 0.9

ISBN: 0670915637
EAN: 9780670915637
ASIN: 0670915637

Publication Date: July 28, 2005
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: In stock in England. Dispatch next working day. PAPERBACK - Carefully read. Very clean and nice. Usual light spine and cover creasing and rubbing on edges and corners. Tight, solid binding.

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 83
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4 out of 5 stars His funniest yet but with a slightly dissapointing ending!   January 24, 2008
The first half of this book is incredibly funny and I found myself laughing out loud at nearly every other page. The concept in itself is very unusual as the idea of a comic novel being about four people who want to commit suicide. I loved the humour that came from Martin, the insanity and honesty that came from Jess and the hope that came from Maureen, JJ I felt nothing for really. The novel was in my opinion his funniest but not his best. I would give the first half five stars and the second half three, his other books are more consistent in general, although to perhaps keep the realism it needed to end this way.


5 out of 5 stars A superb read   January 13, 2008
This novel was recommended to me by a knowledgeable colleague who works in fiction. I absolutely loved it, and was very sad to come to the end of the book. A funny book about four people about to jump off the top of a building doesn't sound like it would be the best read, but it is wonderfully written, full of humour and truth about human life and circumstances. There is something to recognise in all the four protagonists, yet it is clever how you go from liking to disliking them and back again, and the subject certainly makes you think. I read it very quickly. Highly recommended.


2 out of 5 stars Whats the point?   December 16, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

That's exactly it, I just didn't get the point. I took weeks reading it, because I kept getting bored after two pages as nothing of note happens. I didn't like the characters; however it did make me guffaw in places, particularly the odd witty, and rather cutting one liner's. The book is about four people who meet each other by chance at a common suicide spot, and then talk each other out of jumping to their doom. Then the book seems to just bumble along for about 250 pages, and I finished it thinking, "did anything happen?" It has actually left me feeling lethargic, I'm going off to write 250 pages (slowly) about why I feel lethargic, and endeavour to find a few laugh out loud one liners, throw them in, stir everything up and I will have a my very own version of this book, but with rubbish jokes.


5 out of 5 stars A very interesting and engaging book   November 1, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I am not a Nick Hornby fan and found his other books only quite o.k., but this book is simply brilliant. The best book I have read in a long time. At the beginning it is quite funny and all the way it's very interesting, one cannot guess what might happening next.


4 out of 5 stars Thank God It's Not Mawkishly Sentimental   October 11, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I didn't think I would like this book as the write up seemed both macabre and held the promise of neat happy endings and mawkish sentimentality. Then I pulled myself together and remembered it was Hornby writing and that we were unlikely to find either. Luckily I was right. This is a great book, funny in a noirish way, and hugely unsentimental. It shines light on four widely disparate people who inadvertently meet one New Year's Eve as they're attempting to commit suicide. That they survive is obvious from the off, as the book is written in the first person by each of the characters in turn. How they survive is really the theme of the book, and why they might want to. I enjoyed every page and I want to know why, of all his books this one hasn't been made into a film yet, as it's absolutely crying out for it.

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