This entertaining book felt like YA written for adults. I wasn't surprised that John Green, author of YA classics such as The Fault in Our Stars, Turtles All the Way Down, and Paper Towns called it "one of the best books I've ever read."
It is propaganda for the American Dream: that hard work allied with capitalism will make you rich (though it helps to be incredible talented). In this sense, it reminded me of that other fantasy about hard-working geniuses, A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara, though T&T&T has far less misery.
Sam is half-Jewish, half-Korean, handicapped after his foot was injured in a car accident, but he is a math genius so he gets into Harvard. Sadie has a better start in life but she is sufficiently brainy not only to get into MIT but to be an outstanding student. Marx has rich Japanese parents and he's at Harvard. They take time out from their studies to create a computer game and set up their own company to sell it. They work incredibly long hours so, of course, the game is hugely successful. An everyday story of typical folk this is not.
It is written in the past tense. At first sight it appears to adopt a multi-third-person-close perspective but given the fact that the narrator repeatedly chips in with exposition, character notes and back story, it is more like third-person-omniscient.
A feature of the narrative style is the remarkable amount of exposition. Time and again, something happens and we then cut to an explanation, usually involving back-story but also frequently describing character. For example:
- “Without knowing why, Sam had tried to keep Sadie and Marx apart. It wasn't about either of them as individuals. But Sam could be private, verging on paranoid, and he liked to control the flow of information. He feared them comparing notes and somehow ganging up on him ... No one, Sam felt, had ever loved him except those who had been obligated to love him: his mother (before she had died), his grandparents, Sadie (disputed hospital volunteer), Marx (his assigned roommate).” (2.2)
- “Marx was great at being in love, for a bit, and certainly, no one ever left a relationship with Marx feeling abused or hurt. He had the gift of letting people think it was their idea to end the relationship, thereby converting most of his ex-lovers into friends.” (2.3)
- “She hated being drunk, though she did enjoy smoking a joint every now and then. She liked playing games, seeing a foreign movie, a good meal. She liked going to bed early and waking up early. She liked working. She liked that she was good at her work, and she felt proud of the fact that she was well paid for it. She felt pleasure in orderly things - a perfectly efficient section of code, a closet where every item was in its place. She liked solitude and the thoughts of her own interesting and creative mind. She liked to be comfortable. ...” (3.3)
- “Including Lola, Sam had had four different sexual partners in his life, and he had never enjoyed sex with any of them. He had slept with one boy and three girls. While no one had ever mistreated him, sex had given him considerably less pleasure than masturbation. He did not like to be naked in front of other people. He did not like the messiness of sex - it's fluids, it's sounds, it's smells. He worried that his body could not be relied upon.” (3.4a)
- “He was no longer the boy who wanted to taste everything at the buffet.” (5.2)
This is, I suppose, a good way of giving lots of information while keeping the story moving along at a swift pace. This is already a long book and I imagine it would be much longer had the author tried to 'show don't tell'.
Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed it. It was a fast-paced entertaining blockbuster. But the repeated nuggets of exposition meant I was being told how to perceive the characters, rather than being allowed to find out about them for myself.
Selected quotes:- “A truly magnificent thing about the way the brain was coded, Sam thought, was that it could say ‘Excuse me’ while meaning ‘Screw you’.” (1.1)
- “It was impossible to be eleven, with a sick sister, and for people to find your conduct beyond reproach. She was always saying the wrong thing, or being too loud, or demanding too much (time, love, food), even though she had not demanded more than what had been freely given before.” (1.2)
- “Sadie was, by nature, a loner, but even she found going to MIT in a female body to be an isolating experience.” (1.3)
- “A bromide about the creative process is that an artist's first idea is usually the best one.” (2.2)
- “The alternative to [cultural] appropriation is a world where white European people make art about white European people, with only white European references in it. Swap African or Asian or Latin or whatever culture you want for European. A world where everyone is blind and deaf to any culture or experience that is not their own. I hate that world, don't you?” (2.2)
- “Beauty ... is almost always a matter of angles and resolve.” (2.2)
- “When Sadie was asked a question ... she gave a specific answer, usually no more than two sentences. ... When Sam was asked a question, he turned into a novella.” (3.2)
- “Marx is always in love. He's an emotional harlot. What does love even mean when you can find it with so many people and things?” (3.3)
- “The last thing she packed were the handcuffs. She slipped them into the zippered pocket of the large duffel she was planning to check. She didn't want Dov to use them on some other girl. She wasn't sure if this impulse came from a sense of sorority or sentimentality.” (3.5)
- “Unfortunately, the human brain is every bit as closed a system as a Mac.” (4.3a)
- “The whiteboard was no longer white, and its permanent palimpsest was an archive.” (4.1)
- “You go back to work. You take advantage of the quiet time that a failure allows you. You remind yourself that no one is paying any attention to you and it's a perfect time to sit down in front of your computer and make another game. You try again. You fail better.” (5.1)
- “It isn't a sadness, but a joy, that we don't do the same things for the length of our lives.” (5.2)
- “She had thought after Ichigo that she would never fail again. She had thought she arrived. But life was always arriving. There was always another gate to pass through. (Until, of course, there wasn’t.)” (5,2)
- “It was easy to dislike the man; it was harder to dislike the little boy who existed just below the surface of the man.” (6.2)


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