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A review by mcgbreads
Room on the Sea: Three Novellas by André Aciman
emotional
lighthearted
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
5.0
ARC review; thanks to NetGalley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for the access to this ebook. Pub date: Jun 24 2025.
Oh, this was BEAUTIFUL!!! I couldn't and didn't want to put it down. The prose is breathtaking and it was a delight to read, so I'm ending my 2024 reading year on a high note. This book includes 3 novellas, though I'd say it's more like 2 novellas and a short story. The two novellas were my absolute favorites, The Gentleman from Peru and Room on the Sea.
The Gentleman from Peru is about a man who can perceive alternate versions of people's lives, the ones that sprout with every choice we make. He meets a group of young Americans traveling together and the story starts with him as a mentor, sharing his knowledge, but then he starts spending more time with one of the women in the group. The story changes from that point, and the reveal is so beautiful.
I loved the idea of soulmates continuing to exist after they're gone and the inevitability of us finding them again in our alternate versions, even if it takes hundreds of years for us to coincide and meet each other again at the right time.
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Room on the Sea is about a man and a woman in their 60s/70s who meet during jury duty and they connect for a week. We see how their connection builds and how the love that grows between them awakens something in them that they thought was long gone. This story is also about soulmatism, but in a different context.
They're both married, which may be an issue for some people, but I didn't mind it. The way the story unfolds, you can't be angry about two people finding genuine love. It would be different if it was just lust and it was ill-intentioned, but this just didn't feel that way. It kind of reminded me of that old movie, Brief Encounter, which I love.
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Lastly, there's Mariana, a short story that's basically this woman writing a long letter to the man who broke her heart. I think it drags a little, but it explores very well what it feels like to fall deeply in love with someone who was only infatuated with you and what it's like when their infatuation stops, but the love you feel for them continues, no matter what you do to try to get over it.
Overall, a nearly perfect collection of novellas and I will definitely get a physical copy of it when I can.
Oh, this was BEAUTIFUL!!! I couldn't and didn't want to put it down. The prose is breathtaking and it was a delight to read, so I'm ending my 2024 reading year on a high note. This book includes 3 novellas, though I'd say it's more like 2 novellas and a short story. The two novellas were my absolute favorites, The Gentleman from Peru and Room on the Sea.
The Gentleman from Peru is about a man who can perceive alternate versions of people's lives, the ones that sprout with every choice we make. He meets a group of young Americans traveling together and the story starts with him as a mentor, sharing his knowledge, but then he starts spending more time with one of the women in the group. The story changes from that point, and the reveal is so beautiful.
I loved the idea of soulmates continuing to exist after they're gone and the inevitability of us finding them again in our alternate versions, even if it takes hundreds of years for us to coincide and meet each other again at the right time.
-
Room on the Sea is about a man and a woman in their 60s/70s who meet during jury duty and they connect for a week. We see how their connection builds and how the love that grows between them awakens something in them that they thought was long gone. This story is also about soulmatism, but in a different context.
They're both married, which may be an issue for some people, but I didn't mind it. The way the story unfolds, you can't be angry about two people finding genuine love. It would be different if it was just lust and it was ill-intentioned, but this just didn't feel that way. It kind of reminded me of that old movie, Brief Encounter, which I love.
-
Lastly, there's Mariana, a short story that's basically this woman writing a long letter to the man who broke her heart. I think it drags a little, but it explores very well what it feels like to fall deeply in love with someone who was only infatuated with you and what it's like when their infatuation stops, but the love you feel for them continues, no matter what you do to try to get over it.
Overall, a nearly perfect collection of novellas and I will definitely get a physical copy of it when I can.