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⇒ [PDF] Gratis Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books

Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books



Download As PDF : Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books

Download PDF Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books


Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books

A light yet thoughtful book whose author captures human loneliness and confusion within and without.
If you're feeling lost then this is the book.

Read Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books

Tags : Lost and Found [Tom Winter] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. NA,Tom Winter,Lost and Found,Corsair,1472101596

Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books Reviews


`Lost & Found' was a very enjoyable read with it's perfect synchronicity of poignancy, sadness but cut through with a biting wit. We are absorbed into the world of Carol, an ordinary middle-aged woman who has reached a momentous decision to leave her huband, the affable but essentially dull Bob. But Bob's got bad news of a medical nature, and Carol becomes trapped, her only outlet being her emotive outpourings in letter form addressed to the universe, and intercepted at the local Royal Mail depot by Albert, a lonely man on the cusp of retirement. As Carol's yearning for freedom and feelings of resentment intensify, Albert becomes further entangled in this stranger's life, whilst struggling to keep a grip on his own, but are they destined to meet? Through well crafted characterisation and a book that encapsulates so many of the frustrations of everyday life and growing older, Winter immerses us completely in the complications of these people's lives. We observe the regret of opportunities lost and old loves lost as Carol and Albert navigate the channels of other's selfishness and the unsatisfactory nature of their own lives which is so touching and heartfelt, but the whole book is juxtaposed with a savage wit that had me laughing from the second page and throughout. The humour not only adds a lightness to the whole thing, but the nature of the humour adds a greater level of pathos to the whole affair and works incredibly well. The plot is well paced and as the story rotates between Carol and Albert there is no feeling that one is more engaging than the other as they work seamlessly in tandem. Personally, I was a little unsure of the ending but would stress that overall this was a clever and engrossing snapshot of modern life, and the fear of being alone, but also more poignantly, in a marriage feeling alone.

Very similar in style to `The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry' and the wonderful `The Thoughts and Happenings of Wilfred Price..', Tom Winter has created a genuinely unputdownable book that pivots the reader emotionally from the outset. A wonderful debut...
Carol is on the verge of telling her husband, Bob, that their marriage is over. He pips her to the post with an announcement of his own. Trapped, Carol begins to pour out her feelings in the form of letters to the universe. The letters are intercepted by Albert, a lonely post office worker on the verge of retirement. Carol and Albert are strangers, but they become entangled in each other’s lives.

Themes of disappointment and dysfunctional relationships dominate. Carol chose to remain in her marriage to kindly but boring Bob, her ‘eternal man-child’, for her daughter’s sake, only for her daughter to reject her. The difficult mother-daughter relationship is encapsulated in a wonderful description of how Carol senses her daughter’s presence as a ‘chill in the air’, and how she can ‘project her emotions’ through rooms, walls, and ‘perhaps one day the entire population of London will figure out it’s actually Sophie making them feel like crap’. While laughing at the hyperbole, you connect with the deep discontent within the family home. Carol, Bob and Sophie may appear to be a family unit but they are essentially alone.

Themes of isolation and loneliness are developed further through Albert, who lost his loving wife many years previously, and lives on a bleak housing estate in Croydon, south London with only his cat for company. His neighbor is a thug, his working life is nearly over, and it’s only the arrival of Carol’s letters that give him some purpose. His response to the letters is touching and funny, highlighting his vulnerability and naivety.

This is one of those quiet but moving stories of everyday people, living with thwarted dreams. It is superbly English in its tone; mixing dry humor with bitter tragedy, capturing the mundane and absurd nature of life.
Two lost lonely souls connecting through lost letters.

You have Carol who is in an unhappy marriage and a mother to a teenage daughter she doesn’t really understand. Then you have Albert who is a soon to be retired postman who lives with his cat Gloria and the ever present memory of the wife who died some forty years earlier.

Carol isn’t the kind of character you warm to right away. It isn’t clear why she is so unhappy and incapable of showing any kind of true emotions until near the end of the book. Up until that point you don’t really see what she has to complain about. Her husband doesn’t seem too bad (just not really out going or motivated but then he is going through something tough throughout the book) and her daughter isn’t off the rails – she is just really smart (maybe a bit of a know it all at times though). As she is so frustrated with her life her friend suggests writing all her thoughts and feelings down to get it off her chest. This results in some very funny, blunt and moving letters being sent out into the universe.

Albert on the other hand is very likeable and you do feel for him. He is slowly being pushed out of work before he really wants to and doesn’t feel he has anyone he can turn to. This all changes when his boss sets him the task of sorting out all the undelivered mail. He comes across a letter with a smiley face on it and feels like the letter was meant for him. After being alone for so long the letters that follow end up making him feel as though he does have a friend out there. Someone who needs him as they go through a tough time, but more than that, someone he feels connected to. They start to pull him out of his solitary life and back into the real world.

This is a witty, moving story and great for a lunchtime read.
A light yet thoughtful book whose author captures human loneliness and confusion within and without.
If you're feeling lost then this is the book.
Ebook PDF Lost and Found Tom Winter 9781472101594 Books

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