Then We Came to the End: A Novel
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1433 in Books
- Published on: 2008-01-04
- Binding: Paperback
- 400 pages
Editorial Reviews
The Times
Very funny, intense and exhilarating ... For the first time in fiction, it has truly captured the way we work
Craig Brown, Mail on Sunday
It's a long time since I've read a novel so painfully funny, or so absurdly true
Sunday Times
Outstanding ... incisive, urgent, funny and snappily written ... The comedy debut of the year
Customer Reviews
Life in the cubicle-farm
It's interesting to compare the largely positive response to this book by literary critics, and the very negative reviews it's getting here from readers. The Richard and Judy Book Club is one of the most powerful forces in British literary marketing, and they got behind Ferris's debut novel - so what went wrong? Perhaps such audiences typically seek something from a story - uplifting endings, appealing characters, a dramatic and tightly-plotted storyline - that just isn't present in 'Then We Came To The End'. The themes of this book are failure, stagnation and unemployment, and Ferris is seeking to produce a bleak inditement of modern office life. If that's your cup of tea, you might get something out of this story. If not, you'll hate it - hence I gie it 3 stars for being an awkward book that doesn't go out of its way to win the reader over.
In seeking to replicate the tedium of office life in the downbeat style of writing, Ferris has a lot in common with Douglas Coupland, particularly the latter's later noels such as J-Pod. Like Coupland, Ferris cannot resist humanising his characters and, in the end, proiding a low-grade sort of redemption in their compassion, stoicism and relationships with each other. Perhaps this is a good thing, or perhaps it's a cop-out from the bleak cynicism of the early part of the book - that's up to each reader to decide. I can't say I enjoyed the book in a fun way (it's funny-sad, not funny-haha), but I still feel it's doing something important in chronicling the greyness and repetition modern office life, a truth that remains strangely absent from most literature. It's difficult to make a good story out of such elements, and Ferris doesn't really succeed, but still I'm glad to have read it - there's an honesty here about the way we live and interact with each other that's quietly remarkable.
Why did I Bother
Why did I bother, what can I say, so so boring. Then I came to the end and I was so pleased.
INANE !!!!
Don't bother!! Read this on holiday, so was in a forgiving mood, and rarely give up on a book. All I can say is that it was time well wasted - characters that were so unforgettable... what book am I reviewing again???




