Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth
Chris Wareno description yet..
status | Copy #1 (268): in |
---|---|
genre | Literature and Fiction » General Literature |
publisher | Pantheon |
publish date | April 29, 2003 |
popularity | checked out 19 time(s) |
Reviews
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Activism and Human Rights
Adventure
Anarchism
Art
Biography
Children's
Cultural Studies
Drugs
Fantasy
Field Guide
Food
Games
Hard Science
Health
History
Horror
Humor and Satire
Language
Literature and Fiction
Magazine
Magic
Music
Performance Arts
Philosophy
Sci-Fi
Sex & Gender
Social Science
Spirituality
Superhero
Utopian Studies
This is hands down the saddest book I’ve ever read. Read it, but don’t read it too quickly! It explores the pathetic life of a passive middle aged protagonist who’s basically a child, never taking initiative to do anything other than what he’s told. After decades of speculation and fantasizing, Jimmy goes to meet his father, and the story is intricately woven in with stories from the past — that of his own father’s childhood as well as his grandfather’s childhood in a way that examines the impact of trauma through generations. Jimmy Corrigan is heartbreaking, but brilliantly told.