2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
"Novel of Ideas"?, Aug 2 2006
By Spencer Tad - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Inventing God (Paperback)
Geez, this is what passes for a "novel of ideas" these days? This must be more of a comment on the state of other novels than on this book. Yes, ideas are discussed here, but what novel worth half a penny does NOT deal with ideas? Imagine calling Conrad's works, for example, of Joyce's, "novels of ideas." Well OF COURSE!
Mosley is a guilty pleasure read, I've concluded. He starts talking about one character, gets him/her in an interesting situation, then leaves it and starts talking about some other character. As the book goes along, the characters' situations begin to intertwine. Kind of a cheap trick.
Yes, I gave a glowing review to his other book, Impossible Object, and the technique there is not really all that different. I still think that one's worth reading and a lot better than Inventing God, but Inventing God even made me wonder if I had not overestimated that earlier work.
Mosley is particularly horrible at similes and metaphors--he tends to err on the side of overly familiar or blasé ones-- which one would hope would not be such a difficult thing for a writer.