Whatever Love Means by David Baddiel, , 0349113920 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
 Compare book prices at 85 bookstores
Add to Favorite Tell a Friend Link to Us Contact Us Help Home Wish List New!
us online discount book stores United States | canada online books for less Canada | Rare/Out-of-print Books

Whatever Love Means, cheap new, used books  Whatever Love Means
Author: David Baddiel  
ISBN: 0349113920   /   Paperback
Publisher: Abacus   /   2000-10-05
List Price: £6.99
Similar Books   More Details from Amazon.co.uk
Compare new, used book prices

Editorial Reviews:
Vic is a nearly-famous rock guitarist thinking about shacking up in south London with his foul-mouthed thirty-something girlfriend Tess; Vic's best friend Joe is a geeky, AIDS-researching biochemist who shares a son and a flash yuppie pad with the beautiful and slightly Irish Emma. On the day of Princess Diana's death Vic falls into bed with Em; a few months later Joe sort of does the same with Tess. If that were all there was to this book, it would hardly be worth bothering with: just another Hampstead (or rather, Herne Hill) adultery novel. What raises it up a considerable notch, quite apart from Baddiel's obvious gift for very good jokes, is his less expected gift for deadpan but dryly insightful prose, and his even more unexpected talent for fleshing out character. Every player in this touching, tragic tale: female as well as male, minor as much as major, villainous alongside virtuous, is eminently believable, and harrowingly feasible. Not quite so convincing is the Princess-Diana-death subplot that forms a background to the early chapters. Like the hysteria over the Queen of Hearts itself, the whole thing rather peters out, and provides little more than an excuse for the book's well-chosen title (it's a famous Prince Chuck quote apropos his then fiancée Diana). Taken as a whole, small misgivings aside, this is a fine and impressive novel: funny, sad, warm, dark, tender, wise and bleakly memorable. --Sean Thomas
Vic is a nearly-famous rock guitarist thinking about shacking up in south London with his foul-mouthed thirty-something girlfriend Tess; Vic's best friend Joe is a geeky, AIDS-researching biochemist who shares a son and a flash yuppie pad with the beautiful and slightly Irish Emma. On the day of Princess Diana's death Vic falls into bed with Em; a few months later Joe sort of does the same with Tess. If that were all there was to this book, it would hardly be worth bothering with: just another Hampstead (or rather, Herne Hill) adultery novel. What raises it up a considerable notch, quite apart from Baddiel's obvious gift for very good jokes, is his less expected gift for deadpan but dryly insightful prose, and his even more unexpected talent for fleshing out character. Every player in this touching, tragic tale: female as well as male, minor as much as major, villainous alongside virtuous, is eminently believable, and harrowingly feasible. Not quite so convincing is the Princess-Diana-death subplot that forms a background to the early chapters. Like the hysteria over the Queen of Hearts itself, the whole thing rather peters out, and provides little more than an excuse for the book's well-chosen title (it's a famous Prince Chuck quote apropos his then fiancée Diana). Taken as a whole, small misgivings aside, this is a fine and impressive novel: funny, sad, warm, dark, tender, wise, and bleakly memorable. --Sean Thomas

Customer Reviews:
Whatever Love Means     
This book takes 40 or so pages to get going, and then it becomes a real page turner. I thought the characterisation was very good, as was the plot, although I did have some suspicions about the twist early on. Despite dealing with tragic themes, there is a decent amount of humour, although tending to be of the dark variety. This would have been a 5 star book if it hadn't been for a couple of holes in the plot (to do with the care of Jackson), and also the fact that some of the passages didn't flow at all well and had to be re-read to get the gist of what the author was trying to say. Overall very good though - recommended.
Don't expect too many laughs...     
I don't know why I was expecting someething funny, perhaps becasue of Baddiel's background, but I certainly didn't get it!

Vic starts an affair with his friend Joe's wife, Emma, in the days following the death of Princess Diana. (The blurb describes this as 'an intense and passionately sexual liaison', but don't get too excited becasue there's little evidence of any real passion.)
The book covers the months that follow, how the relationship develops and changes and what happens to all the characters as a result...

....then something strange happens.....

The latter half of the book is filled with the most implauisible set of coincidences I have ever read, you will really need to suspend your disbelief with this one!

I did enjoy this book. Baddiel on his worst day is a lot better than other writers on their best so I would say it is worth a read, but perhaps as it is only his second novel he is still 'cutting his teeth'?

Why any writer would bother to descibe 'parallelogrammatic buttocks' though, is beyond me!
Loved every minute of it     
Fantastic novel which alternates between being hilarious (laugh out loud) in many places and being extremely dark at the same time. Quite a page turner too and got through it very quickly.
watch out for Boris!     
A brilliant, realistic, sad, yet funny book, with a very dark ending. Very well written, and the bit where Boris (the dog) gets a bit of a fright and reacts accordingly, actually made me glad I wasn't reading it on a bus, because I laughed hysterically until I hurt!
Fine - nothing special     
I liked Time for Bed, and so I'd been looking forward to reading this. The story is entertaining enough - mainly set around Joe (a hedonist) and his assorted friends. The story moves along at an acceptable pace, as we're introduced to the various characters, but I was left with the nagging feeling that these people just didn't hang together in any way. I know they were obviously meant to be tensely friends, but still, it seemed a little contrived. This feeling of a lack of grounding in something concrete seemed to be a bit of a theme: maybe now David Baddiel has a child of his own he'll cringe at the amazingly child-free lifestyle of one of his main characters whilst being a single parent. I'm being too negative, though. I read the whole thing in a few days, because I wanted to see what happened to the characters. I loved the title - and the atmosphere of this devestating comment made by Prince Charles about whether or not he was in love with Princess Diana - just after they had announced their engagement - resonated through the book well. So, it's worth a read, but don't expect too much. Some of these other reviews descibe it as a work of genius - it isn't, but the ideas in the book are interesting, if a little under-developed.
View more reviews or product details from Amazon.co.uk


 

            

 

Looking for Rare, Out of Print Books? Click here


About Us
 Recommend Us Bookmark Link To Us Wish List New!


us online discount book stores United States | buy uk books online United Kingdom | canada online books for less Canada

(c) 2004 BookFinder4u UK - Search Cheap new, used, out of print books.


Suggestion Box:
Let us know anything you like or don't like about this website.