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BookBrowse - Beverly Melven
Those who have an interest in psychology - we who are obsessed with why people do the things they do, all the inner workings of humans - will find much to like here. Virtually all of this book happens inside someone's head... The tiny instances that become founding principles in a person's actions; the thoughtless word or action that ruins a relationship - these things are laid bare in the lives of two children as they grow to adulthood... This book is not a fairy tale, so there is no happy ending wrapped up in a bow. What we get is an ending worthy of the story, with hope for those willing to make a different choice. The book is not long or complicated, but once I started liking these people, I was pulled along by the desire to see these people let just one person truly know them.
An exquisite rendering of what one might call feelings at the subatomic level, emotion's muons, gluons and quarks.
The melancholy that hangs over The Solitude of Prime Numbers is seductive and unnerving. From the moment we meet young [Alice and Mattia] we're engrossed by the way in which a dreadful combination of faulty brain wiring and rotten luck propels each child's future, like number sequences locking into place. (A-)
The novel's bleak subject matter is rendered almost beautiful by Giordano's spare, intense focus on his two characters.
A quietly explosive ending completes the novel in just the fashion it was started, as an intimate psychological portrait of two “prime numbers”—together alone and alone together.
A bestseller in Europe, winner of the Premio Strega in the author's native Italy, this compelling debut shows a remarkable sensitivity and maturity in the depiction of its damaged soulmates. Fragile, unconventional love story by a talent to watch.
Not a bad result for a first attempt at fiction by a promising hope for the future of Italian literature.
I was fully expecting, purely for reasons of professional envy, to dislike this book. Anyone whose first novel sells more than a million copies worldwide, and goes on to win Italy's most prestigious literary prize, the Premio Strega, is bound to turn the rest of us slightly green. Add to that the fact that Paolo Giordano is the right side of 30 and that writing is, for him, but a hobby (he's actually a particle physicist) and you'll understand why I was tightening up my laces to give his pretentiously titled tome a good kicking. But actually it's a very accomplished book and deserves all its success.
In this otherwise sombre book, Giordano posits the possibilities of ballast, connection and hope, allowing a modicum of light into their benighted lives as adulthood tempers their anxieties. A stunning achievement.