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Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
No
Loveable characters:
No
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
tense
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Complicated
Diverse cast of characters:
No
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
Solid 3 star book
Read this book in Dutch
The book is an easy read and I did enjoy reading it. It is not very long and it is quite fast paced. However I do think that everything that happend was quite unlikely and not very realistic, although the descriptions and the setting are realistic themselves.
But I still liked reading it. I liked the maincharacter Karen and some of the others. Nearing the end everything became a bit like I predicted so it wasn't really suprising.
The ending wasn't as good as I had hoped. The writing style was nice. And I liked the overall story.
I have to say that all the characters and their relations could be confusing but it is managable while reading.
So it isn't the best book I've ever read but it also isn't the worst. It was a nice read, really. I don't regret reading it. A good choice if you want a fast read.
Read this book in Dutch
The book is an easy read and I did enjoy reading it. It is not very long and it is quite fast paced. However I do think that everything that happend was quite unlikely and not very realistic, although the descriptions and the setting are realistic themselves.
But I still liked reading it. I liked the maincharacter Karen and some of the others. Nearing the end everything became a bit like I predicted so it wasn't really suprising.
The ending wasn't as good as I had hoped. The writing style was nice. And I liked the overall story.
I have to say that all the characters and their relations could be confusing but it is managable while reading.
So it isn't the best book I've ever read but it also isn't the worst. It was a nice read, really. I don't regret reading it. A good choice if you want a fast read.
dark
emotional
mysterious
fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Plot
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
No
Diverse cast of characters:
No
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
In a commuter village near Amsterdam, upwardly mobile couples have moved in to live the suburban dream. Large houses, ostentatious wealth, room to move, safe streets for the children to play in, village atmosphere. In reality husbands leave early in the morning, the community is closed and unwelcoming to newcomers, wives feel isolated and the beautiful homes aren't quite enough. Karen and Marcel were inner-city dwellers, both working on their own creative careers and a very close couple. They thought they had the suburban dream but the reality is that Marcel is spending hours away from home and Karen is increasingly lonely and isolated. Searching for something, Karen finally forms a friendship with 4 other women, they meet regularly in the village, and with their husbands in tow, form “the Dinner Club”.
The book starts off when Karen (who narrates the story) and Marcel are woken by the news that there is a house on fire. Evert dies in that fire, but his wife and their two sons luckily escape. All the members of the Dinner Club are devastated and distressed and they rally close to support her in anyway they can. Tensions in the group are soon simmering away and the fire triggers a chain of devastating events. What Karen had thought was a close and supportive group of friends, turns out to have a lot more going on just below the surface than she ever realised. When another member of the Dinner Club falls from a hotel balcony, Karen quickly finds herself more and more on the outer of the group, and finally seeing the real truth behind the genteel suburban façade.
On the face of it, the book is about 5 women and then their husbands – depending on your perception they could be bitchy and very unpleasant; caring and supportive; self involved and mindless; interested in each other; using each other to validate their own beliefs and behaviour; naïve and foolish; sleezy and gross; sexy and attractive; claustrophobic and controlling; carefree and happy, creepy and disturbing. There's always something slightly off about this group – although Karen initially sees them only as kind and caring friends.
Reading THE DINNER CLUB, I initially wondered what the fuss was all about. It was a very quick read but surprisingly engaging despite a natural inclination to dislike these sorts of women intensely. But this book has sold record numbers of copies in its homeland and there must be a reason for that. I suspect that ultimately there are a number of different ways in which this book could be read and understood. On one level it's simply a book about a group of friends that fall apart because of their contributory behaviour, a sort of chick-lit mystery narrative. On another level it's a book about perception – what one person sees (or prefers to see) can be very different from what is actually happening or even what another person is seeing in the same events. At another level it's possible that the book could be read as an analogy of the destruction of a society – how the power base of relationships can be used to achieve an outcome, or how the manipulated can become the manipulator. Certainly, by the stage that the truth is revealed and the perpetrator exposed, the book is a lot less about the mystery and a lot more about the power plays.
Ultimately, I suspect that THE DINNER CLUB is going to be one of those books that people will either like or loathe. It's definitely one to think about, and for that I'm going to come down on the like side.
The book starts off when Karen (who narrates the story) and Marcel are woken by the news that there is a house on fire. Evert dies in that fire, but his wife and their two sons luckily escape. All the members of the Dinner Club are devastated and distressed and they rally close to support her in anyway they can. Tensions in the group are soon simmering away and the fire triggers a chain of devastating events. What Karen had thought was a close and supportive group of friends, turns out to have a lot more going on just below the surface than she ever realised. When another member of the Dinner Club falls from a hotel balcony, Karen quickly finds herself more and more on the outer of the group, and finally seeing the real truth behind the genteel suburban façade.
On the face of it, the book is about 5 women and then their husbands – depending on your perception they could be bitchy and very unpleasant; caring and supportive; self involved and mindless; interested in each other; using each other to validate their own beliefs and behaviour; naïve and foolish; sleezy and gross; sexy and attractive; claustrophobic and controlling; carefree and happy, creepy and disturbing. There's always something slightly off about this group – although Karen initially sees them only as kind and caring friends.
Reading THE DINNER CLUB, I initially wondered what the fuss was all about. It was a very quick read but surprisingly engaging despite a natural inclination to dislike these sorts of women intensely. But this book has sold record numbers of copies in its homeland and there must be a reason for that. I suspect that ultimately there are a number of different ways in which this book could be read and understood. On one level it's simply a book about a group of friends that fall apart because of their contributory behaviour, a sort of chick-lit mystery narrative. On another level it's a book about perception – what one person sees (or prefers to see) can be very different from what is actually happening or even what another person is seeing in the same events. At another level it's possible that the book could be read as an analogy of the destruction of a society – how the power base of relationships can be used to achieve an outcome, or how the manipulated can become the manipulator. Certainly, by the stage that the truth is revealed and the perpetrator exposed, the book is a lot less about the mystery and a lot more about the power plays.
Ultimately, I suspect that THE DINNER CLUB is going to be one of those books that people will either like or loathe. It's definitely one to think about, and for that I'm going to come down on the like side.
Om eerlijk te zijn, weet ik niet zo goed wat ik nou van dit boek moet vinden. Is het intens slecht, of vermakelijk? Het verhaal is fijn geschreven en leest erg vlot weg. Maar de karakters zijn allemaal walgelijke, verwende en belachelijk rijke mensen. En ook het plot voelt heel vaag. Is de conclusie dat iedereen nep is? Dat niemand daarvoor wordt gestraft? Ik heb echt geen flauw idee.
Overigens ook bizar dat er zo absurd veel wordt gerookt en gedronken. En dat het, afgezien van het begin van het boek, geen enkel moment gaat over de gerechten die de leden van deze zogenaamde eetclub koken. Koken ze eigenlijk überhaupt wel? Of hebben ze daar ook al personeel voor in dienst?
Overigens ook bizar dat er zo absurd veel wordt gerookt en gedronken. En dat het, afgezien van het begin van het boek, geen enkel moment gaat over de gerechten die de leden van deze zogenaamde eetclub koken. Koken ze eigenlijk überhaupt wel? Of hebben ze daar ook al personeel voor in dienst?
emotional
mysterious
sad
tense
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Plot
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
No
Diverse cast of characters:
No
Flaws of characters a main focus:
No
Wijn, sigaretten, vreemdgaan, depressie, moord en Gooise vrouwen. Het had zo sterk kunnen zijn, maar als het boek dikker was geweest had ik het niet uitgelezen. Niet bepaald literair hoogstaand. Een erg simpel en doorsnee Nederlands boek.
Niet zo geweldig, voorspelbaar, maar toch ook wel vermakelijk. Prima boek om gewoon eventjes te lezen.