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Book Review of The Mosquito Coast

The Mosquito Coast
The Mosquito Coast
Author: Paul Theroux
Genre: Literature & Fiction
Book Type: Paperback
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Helpful Score: 1


Coast is King!, June 20, 2005
Reviewer: Glenn H. Teal (Temperance, MI United States) - See all my reviews

I read this book a good 12 years ago and it still haunts me. In fact there are a few passages I can almost quote verbatim and have used in talks to illustrate the desperate quest of the human heart for a life of significance. Which is after all what Theroux's masterful work is all about.

All the stuff about Allie Fox's travels to Central America is just a tremendously well told story that provides a context for Allie's deep desire to live a life that matters -- unlike the predictable and ordinary life his father led. Ultimately his horrific and predictable demise blinded on the beach is the logical result of a man gone mad with hubris. Memorable writing that stays with me to this day!

As good as I remembered, June 26, 2005
Reviewer: Julian Faigan (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews

I read this novel when it first appeared and greatly enjoyed it. The evocative setting sticks in the memory, and I was very happy to find that I could read it again just this month with even greater enjoyment. While my first read was very hurried (as the story was so engrossing), on this second occasion I digested it very carefully. It was worth the effort: the plot moves at a good pace, the landscape is so beautifully described and the tricks of nature so realistic, you really feel you are sharing in the bizarre travels of Allie and his poor family. Yes, Allie is most annoying, as many readers have noted, and - yes - the mother should be more positive in her response to her husband's madness. But life is like this and "The Mosquito Coast" remains one of my all-time favourite novels.