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5.0étoiles sur 5 The Birth Day
"Seize The Day" is about the day Tommy Wilhelm hit his financial and emotional bottom and emerges from a lifetime of confusion and failure to find his true self, his spiritual self. Bellow's novel of psycological introspection and intrege compelled this reader to examine his own life a little closer. Maybe you will be fascinated by doing the same.
Publié le Mai 26 2004 par William Ramsey

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3.0étoiles sur 5 carpe diem!
Just kidding with my tittle. I can't help but connect Robin Williams and co. jumping off of desks in Dead Poet's Society to the phrase Carpe Diem/ Seize The Day. (I know, Saul Bellow wrote this book before Mr.Williams was even born!)

I thought this book had a great start. I loved the characterizations in the first half, I felt I was really getting into it. Sadly, by...

Publié le Jui 27 2001 par lady detective

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1.0étoiles sur 5 If you want to be depressed and angry, read this book!, Juil 1 2004
I was forced to read this book in English 201 (Sophomore College Class) and HATED it! I had to write a paper too, I got an A but only because I told the TRUTH of this book! The main character who calls himself Tommy Wilhelm is immature, unthinking and incredibly selfish. He's addicted to pain-killer medication, never washes his hands and is balding, fat and separated from his wife. We find out at the beginning of the book that Tommy is living in an old-folks retirement home in New York City even though he is only in his 40's. Tommy just lost his job at a children's furniture factory. His wife and son live in New York but he won't live with them. Tommy is down to his last few hundred dollars and has foolishly invested them in the stock market on the advice of Dr. Tamkin, a lying, cheating, vulture-like oldster with unclean personal habits.

In the course of the book, we find that Tommy's real name is actually Wilhelm Adler but he changed his name because he wanted to start a Hollywood career. Tommy makes all the wrong decisions before he finds the right one, and he follows many stupid whims and the advice of anyone who knows how to flatter him, he never stops to consider common sense. He also believes wild stories from Dr. Tamkin, who probably isn't a doctor at all judging from his actions. Tommy's juvenile tendencies are reinforced in many ways. First, his name: Tommy is a name for little boys, upon reaching maturity men are called Tom or Thomas, not the diminuative Tommy. Second: His father still calls him Wilky, a hated nickname from childhood. This is his father's way of letting Tommy know that he still acts like a child. Third: Tommy expects his father to pay his rent for him, even though he is 40-some years old! Fourth: The fact that he lives in the same building as his father even though he despises the old man, it's as if he can't break his ties from Daddy.

There are many water symbols in this book, allusions to baptism and rebirth, symbols of what Tommy needs to do for himself. Also allusions to death and corpses, which are a symbol of what Tommy is falling in to. Throughout, we see Tommy slowly spiral downwards in pills, depression, doubt and stupidity until he hits rock-bottom. We learn about his life prior to this point and the affair he had with a Catholic girl in another town.

My professor was a very good instructor, but he must have really had a synical side to him in order to enjoy this book so much! To let you know, my paper was actually a LOT better than this review but I hated this book so much that I just don't have the energy to actually use my talents on this book one more time! This is just my plea to you, DO NOT READ THIS BOOK!!! Not unless you are a hopeless manic/depressive with no hope to your life!

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5.0étoiles sur 5 The Birth Day, Mai 26 2004
Par William Ramsey (El Paso, Tx USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
"Seize The Day" is about the day Tommy Wilhelm hit his financial and emotional bottom and emerges from a lifetime of confusion and failure to find his true self, his spiritual self. Bellow's novel of psycological introspection and intrege compelled this reader to examine his own life a little closer. Maybe you will be fascinated by doing the same.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 an agony to read about a loser losing, Mars 4 2004
Par Robert J. Crawford (Balmette Talloires, France) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This is Bellow's paean to failure, the slow slide of a good-hearted though dumb and self-destructive man. He is heading to his doom, and is a sucker the whole way. Reading this is hard, much like the inexorable decline of people in a Balzac novel, but it is a peculiarly American brand of failure with the post-war culture and Hollywood dreams in tow. It is a masterpiece.

Recommended, but keep the valium handy.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 for bellow, this is the place to start, Fév 18 2004
Par Sam Duncan (Hillsville, VA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
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I generally agree with what the other reviewers say about this book, though I'm not sure they appreciate the level of sympathy, and even love, Bellow has for his flawed creation (and Bellow's warmth is one of many things I love about him). I would add that this book is the best introduction to Bellow's work. Like Herzog and The Adventures of Augie March it is unarguably a classic of twentieth century literature; unlike them it's short and relatively straightforward, and once you see what the man can accomplish in a mere 115 pages you'll definitely be primed for more.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Throw Him a Lifeline, He's Drowning!, Nov. 25 2003
Par T. Thompson (Wales, ME) - Voir tous mes commentaires
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Poor Tommy Wihelm! This is a sad spectacle of a novella. Sad, in that you can't help but feel for this poor guy. Tommy Wilhelm has squandered his life. He chased his dreams to Hollywood.... and failed. He got into business... and failed. He got married and had to boys... and failed. He tried to become a commodities trader... and failed.
I can't help but think of Biff Loman, when I read this one. Tommy Wilhelm's life is a story of bad choices and missed opportunities. We all have experienced moments like this, but Wilhelm's whole life is based on this premise.
As the story comes to a conclusion. Tommy Wilhelm's life begins to crash down bit by bit until it looks totally hopeless. And really, it is totally hopeless.
Tommy's plunge into a torrent of tears is a fitting end to this sad, sad story.
Bellow's writing is lean and direct. This book is a great case- study of futile, life planning. It is well written and worth your attention.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Packs a Mighty Wallop, Nov. 5 2003
Par Barry Fitzsimmons (New York City) - Voir tous mes commentaires
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How is it that a novel of such importance, by one of our country's premiere men of letters, has been reviewed by only one other Amazonian? Goodness, the state American Literature is in. We are a country losing our soul, much as Tommy Wilhelm in Bellow's "Seize the Day." This book should be appreciated by more readers, plain and simple.

Imagine a man. A child of a man, really, who never quite grew up and never took the time to know himself. He took pills instead. He took the easy route. He painted his life into a corner, and the paint... ain't... drying. Tommy can you hear me? Tommy, it's time to smash the damn mirror and all those bottles of pills and all the bum advice you take from that quack who lives above you in that New York Hotel where you have breakfast with your successful dad every day, the same dad who practically begs you to grow up and go back to your wife and kids and fix what's wrong in your life instead of blaming others.

Sound familiar? Sound like a parable for a nation gone fat with overindulgence and extended adolescence? And yet it's such a personal story. It's just one day in a man's life... a day-long trial for a man who can't make things right because he pushes when he needs to pull.

We all maybe need to push a little less and pull a little more is all I'm saying. Bellow's work represents a life so eff'd up that there may be no solution. Again I ask, sound familiar?

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5.0étoiles sur 5 A Slender American Classic, Sep 22 2003
Par Jerry Call (St. Louis, MO) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
I first read this book years ago, when I was losing my shirt (and just about every other item of clothing I owned) as a commodity-futures trader. Someone had told me the book concerned a guy in the same situation. Readers certainly won't find much in "Seize the Day" about the workings of the commodity markets, but they will discover an incredibly well-explored character named Tommy Wilhelm, who gambles what's left of his money in a desperate effort to get out of hock. Wilhelm is an excruciating combination of victim and self-defeating loser. Bellow's relentless examination of a man on the verge of a nervous breakdown makes for riveting reading. And while Tommy Wilhelm could serve as a poster-boy warning to anyone thinking of speculating in risky investments, he definitely stands as a symbol of what can happen to people when they take themselves and the "American Dream" too seriously.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Lard have mercy, Mars 17 2003
Par A.J. (Maryland) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
"Seize the Day" is a sad little novel about a man, lost in the wilderness of his life, whose struggle "toward the consummation of his heart's ultimate need" can succeed only when he surrenders his composure to his deepest emotions, that secret place in all of us from which we beckon our tears. The one day in which the entire novel takes place completely encapsulates his past, present, and future into the portrait of a man mired in his environment.

The man is 44-year-old Tommy Wilhelm who, like some of Bellow's other fictional protagonists Augie March, Eugene Henderson, and Moses Herzog, is a little piece of the chaos of twentieth-century urban America distilled into a single confused character. Wilhelm is a native New Yorker (although it's obvious his author is not), a failed actor, and an unemployed former sales executive. He is separated from his wife, who is always selfishly demanding from him money that he doesn't have, and his two sons. His only financial support now is from his father, a successful physician who is annoyed by his son's lack of discipline but nevertheless brags about his past accomplishments to anyone who will listen.

Wilhelm has a friend named Dr. Tamkin who professes to be a psychologist, has many various interests but dubious talents, and persuades him to invest his last dollar in lard commodities. Tamkin, a world traveler, has told Wilhelm that he "had attended some of the Egyptian royal family as a psychiatrist," a statement that evokes an image of the biblical Joseph prophesying for the Pharaoh seven years of plenty followed by seven years of famine; but Tamkin's optimistic expectation for lard is all profit, no loss. His philosophy is that the future is not worth the worry; live for the "here-and-now": seize the day. He is undoubtedly a charlatan, but in Wilhelm's eyes he means well.

One of the novel's themes is atonement, which is signified by the reference to Yom Kippur. Wilhelm is not very religious and has not planned to attend a synagogue, but he recognizes the importance of saying Yiskor for his dead mother; his sincere but idle threat to the unknown hoodlums who vandalized the bench next to her grave will not suffice to honor her memory. Ironically, the place where he ultimately atones is the funeral of a man who is evidently not Jewish (open casket, presence of flowers) -- and he weeps with the knowledge that death is all we achieve from life. Seize the day, indeed.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 A Great Read for Writers, Janv. 6 2003
Par Un client
Suffering...we've all had it...or it's coming...is Bellow's theme of this work. I've never read an author who described heartbreak and tears so well as Saul Bellow. My face was red and hot and strained by the time I finished the book--he moved me! Suffering--admitting and recognizing that anguish might be your temporary lot in life--has never been so beautifully penned and honestly told. The more I think of the book, the less I like it for the story, but the more I appreciate its truthfulness in describing how problems can stack higher and higher and higher and nobody will help you.

I think you'll find what the main characters "seizes" after a few days of thinking and observing life on your own.

Read it! It's only 120 pages packed with a lot of insight.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 A deep psychological work, Avril 3 2002
Par therosen "therosen" (New York, NY United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This is a story about relationships and alienation. It is a psychological work by Bellow, getting in the head of a man coming to grips with his mid-life failures. It also shows his relationships with a tough love (or just tough?) father, and manipulative friends. As you read it, you struggle between repulsion, sympathy and identification with the lead character.

The book is very accessible and easy to read given the intellectual pedigree of the author. Even still, one is left at the end wondering, "What did I miss?" While the reader may be left perplexed, it is a sign of the depth of material pushed into such a short novel.

I'm left thinking, "It's a good, deep book" - perhaps a more in tune reader would find it a great one.

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Penguin Classics Seize The Day
Penguin Classics Seize The Day par Saul Bellow (Paperback - Mai 27 2003)
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