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Robert Cohen (3) (1957–)

Autor(a) de Inspired Sleep: A Novel

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9+ Works 287 Membros 5 Críticas

About the Author

Robert Cohen is the author of three novels, The Organ Builder, The Here and Now, and Inspired Sleep. His work has been awarded a Whiting Writers' Award, a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Writers Award, The Ribalow Prize, and The Pushcart Prize, and has appeared in a wide variety of publications, mostrar mais including Harpers, GQ, The Paris Review, Atlantic Unbound, and Ploughshares. He teaches at Middlebury College in Vermont mostrar menos
Image credit: Robert Cohen (3)

Obras por Robert Cohen

Associated Works

Who We Are: On Being (and Not Being) a Jewish American Writer (2005) — Contribuidor — 26 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

A wonderfully written tale of a man going through a mid-life crisis, who shares alternating chapters with 30-year-old man trying to get a start on adulthood.

Wonderful insights into male psyche here, but the main reason to read Robert Cohen is the beauty of his prose, his genius-level observations on the human condition, and his light humorous touch that makes taking all his brilliance in such a joy.
 
Assinalado
johnluiz | 1 outra crítica | Aug 6, 2013 |
Robert Cohen has won numerous awards, and I can't quite understand why his
name and sales don't rank right up there with other contemporary writers
like Michael Chabon and Tom Perrotta. In INSPIRED SLEEP, Cohen examines the
public's dependence on/love affair with prescription drugs such as
anti-depressants. Chapters rotate between the perspective of two main
characters --Bonnie Saks, a divorced mother of two, and Ian Ogelvie, a
psychiatrist/researcher on a project designed to enhance REM sleep and
thereby elevate the subject's mood. Saks is an insomniac who becomes a
subject in Ogelvie's study at "Boston General" hospital. The novel explores
a lot of big issues -- such as the way today's medical researchers are in
bed with big pharma -- and all the room for corruption/lapses of ethics that
can create. The book also looks at the potential impact of placebos,
explained in detail by Ian as expectancy theory -- the idea that merely
wanting something to come true can bring about its fruition. It's
fascinating to watch the varied perspectives -- Bonnie's a cynic, who is
depressed about her life -- and Ian is an idealist, who has complete faith
in the medical model, believing that one day medicine can find a
drug-related cure for every human ailment -- emotional and physical. As much
as this book will get you thinking, though, the greatest joy comes from the
way Cohen writes. He drafts some of the most beautiful sentences I've ever
read. If you like this one, go back and read The Here and Now and The Organ
Builder. Both are terrific reads as well.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
johnluiz | 1 outra crítica | Aug 6, 2013 |
Drawn to this book by a recent glowing "You Must Read This" review on NPR, I looked forward to being exposed to a same-age-as-me contemporary author. Alas, for me, the book fell flat -- though I did read it through to the end. I appreciate that Cohen writes with style and care, but I felt he was trying to be clever and witty at the expense of many of his largely self-absorbed protagonists. In most cases, the narrative voice lacked sympathy, which led me to wonder: why did Cohen bother bringing the characters to life in the first place? Personally I wouldn 't begin compare Cohen with Philip Roth, even when the latter writer is having a very bad day, because the characters who inhabit Cohen's stories (this set of them, at least) are narrowly peculiar and not very memorable.

In comparison with this volume, two contemporary short story collections that did a better job of grabbing me over the past year were Amy Bloom's "Where the God of Love Hangs Out" and Jhumpa Lahiri's "Unaccustomed Earth".
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
EpicTale | Aug 7, 2011 |
I didn't enjoy this. The characters were too ordinary to be interesting. The writing was also quite ordinary, especially in the early chapters when the author made comparison after comparison using "as if..." The settings were unremarkable or not well described. It wasn't a bad book, just long and uninspiring.
 
Assinalado
theageofsilt | 1 outra crítica | Dec 28, 2009 |

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Henry Mayer Contributor
Margot Adler Contributor
Julie A. Reuben Contributor
Robert Post Contributor
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Estatísticas

Obras
9
Also by
1
Membros
287
Popularidade
#81,379
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Críticas
5
ISBN
172
Línguas
3

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