Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Rise and Fall of Great Powers
The Rise and Fall of Great Powers | Tom Rachman
A sprawling American odyssey about the nature of identity and family, for fans of Jonathan Franzen, Miranda July and Donna Tartt. Who is Tooly Zylberberg? How did she end up running a second-hand bookstore in Wales? The Russian emigre Humphrey teaches her to play chess, but how does he fit in? Or Sarah who turns up without warning and then disappears again? And what about Venn, the shadowy and charismatic figure who seems to be one step ahead of everybody? Spanning three decades, and taking us from Bangkok to Brooklyn to the border towns of Wales, The Rise and Fall of Great Powers is a story about how mystifying the past can be, and how the lives we lead can seem indecipherable even to us. It's a story about unexpected connections and the revelations that change everything. The Rise and Fall of Great Powers will consolidate Rachman's reputation as one of the most assured and exciting young writers alive. Tom Rachman was born in 1974 in London, and grew up in Vancouver. He has worked as an editor at the foreign desk of The Associated Press in New York, as an AP correspondent in Rome and as an editor at the International Herald Tribune in Paris. Rachman now lives in London. His first novel, The Imperfectionists, was longlisted for the The Giller Prize. tomrachman.com textpublishing.com.au
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
BarbaraBB
post image
Bailedbailed

There‘s too much going on in this book and I have no clue what it is.

Aims42 Aww bummer! Great looking cover though 😕 11mo
BarbaraBB @Aims42 absolutely! 11mo
LeahBergen Leave it on the train! 😆 11mo
BarbaraBB @LeahBergen Great idea! I wish I‘d thought of that! 11mo
80 likes4 comments
blurb
LeslieO
post image

Like The Imperfectionists, I loved this one. I love Rachman's characters, dialog, the bookish setting, all of it. Can't wait to read The Italian Teacher.

34 likes1 stack add
review
JSW
Mehso-so

What a random book. Alternating between delightfully odd characterizations, to-the-bone sharp observations, and what feel like the author's opinions veiled in his characters' dialogue, nothing really holds this book together beyond a weak mystery about its protagonist. I can't really recommend it, but there were lucid moments of purely brilliant observation that were captured in concise description. Just an odd book.

quote
JSW
post image

Brutal paragraph. And brilliant. And so recognizable.

17 likes1 stack add
quote
JSW
post image

Usually when I read about odd, slightly pathetic characters, I'm pained at their odd, slightly pathetic lives. But with this book I'm just amused and a little self-congratulatory that I have my shit together.

blurb
Anescapewithinthepages
post image

I'm one lucky girl 💕📚😍

blurb
Anescapewithinthepages
post image

Today's Steal!! Normally $27 and I got it for $2! Thank you Dollar General! #bookwormhappymoment

britt_brooke Nice score!! 👏🏻 7y
11 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Tamarity
post image

The perfect setting.📚

blurb
MrBook
post image

#TBRtemptation post 5! It begins in a dusty bookshop. Then comes abduction, political debate, glimpses into strangers' homes, & whirlwind globe-trotting. Curious personalities, a mystery, & lots of books: collected, coveted, stolen. Tooly's a Welsh bookseller, & she has a patchy past, raised in Asia, Europe, & the US, by people she no longer knows. From the '80s to today, Bangkok to NYC, get ready for adventure! #blameLitsy #blameMrBook 😎

LitsyGoesPostal 😊👍🏻 8y
JSW I found this at my bookstore on the sale table. I had no idea you posted about it! Oh, Litsy. ❤️ 7y
MrBook @JSW ☺️ I've been starting to post books I've posted before and get lost in the wash, so to speak, lol. Seems to be working out well since not all Littens don't/can't get on Litsy all the time. 😁 7y
64 likes10 stack adds3 comments
review
mklong
post image
Panpan

Boy, was this bad! I would have bailed were it not a book club pick. Our protagonist, Tooly, fails to ask some very obvious questions of the people who raised her until it is far too late and they are all scattered to the wind. Much of the book is a maddeningly fruitless global search for answers. All is eventually revealed, but the payoff is way too little and way too late.

Cinfhen I bailed on this one, glad to hear I didn't miss out😊 8y
21 likes1 comment
blurb
mklong
post image

My #currentreads. I'm loving the Harry Potter re-read and War and Peace on Serial. I am less in love, so far, with Sport of Kings on audio and Rise and Fall of Great Powers, which is my book club's pick this month.
#riotgrams

31 likes3 comments
quote
hellohellolacy
post image