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cosmopolis
cosmopolis
Author: don DeLillo
Set in NYC it is one day in the life of a very financially successful man who micromanages his life and is so rigid that he is unable to respond with feeling to what happens in his life. Well written, disturbing.
ISBN: 437923
Publication Date: 2003
Pages: 209
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: scribner
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed cosmopolis on + 46 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
amusing in a y2k information mogul type of way. this book owes more to its interesting concept and plot-twists than to any of its characters.
reviewed cosmopolis on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book was an intense read, but it is very deep.
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reviewed cosmopolis on
If you're looking for a weird book that will make you think, this one is for you.
Sue-in-AZ avatar reviewed cosmopolis on + 108 more book reviews
A little odd - reminded me of the books I had to read in Philosophy 101 in college.

I was on a long flight with just this book for entertainment, otherwise I might not have finished.

The book tracks the final day in the life of a billionaire.

Narcissistic, shallow, impulsive, nihilist - everything you would hate in a real person. And everything I ended up hating in the main character.

The story was hard to follow, the characters completely unsympathetic, the violence fairly extreme, the vignettes utterly unbelievable.

If you want a return to your college years and read a book that feels like its supposed to "mean" something but is really just bad writing - this is the book for you!
reviewed cosmopolis on + 4 more book reviews
Bad timing for this book. I feel like if I had read it on another occasion I would have loved it, but I just finished grad school, and this was too ... introspective, I guess. I am more in the mood for mindless fun right now.

Read this for book club. If it hadn't been for book club, I think I would have given up on it. So I pushed through it even though I couldn't relate to the protagonist (if you would call him that) on any level.

I did like the pie-in-the-face incident and some of the writing, but DeLillo's overuse of the word "what" drove me nuts.

Book Wiki

People/Characters
Eric Packer (Primary Character)
Benno Levin (Major Character)
Torval (Average Character)

Genres: