![]() ![]() Why kill off these innocuous folks? Who knows? maybe to appear serious?īut there's a piece of writing, an accomplishment of actual storytelling, that begins on and treats the pathos of a person recently diagnosed with breast cancer. At the very end of the novel - six years later - we learn that a number of the officemates in fact died. One of the great discoveries that happens in this novel, over the next 384 pages, is that persons do, as it turns out, die. On, we get this insight: "Our boredom was ongoing, a collective boredom, and it would never die because we would never die." It's neither annoying nor enticing - but it seems to want to provoke commentary. ![]() It's written in the first-person plural, which is about the extent of its original contributions. Then We Came to the End begins like a sequel to the movie "Office Space", written by Chuck Palahniuk. It fails for the reason so many MFA-workshopped novels fail: It's a technically proficient piece of writing about unserious folks discovering truths that serious persons generally know long before their 30th birthdays. Oh, it's witty and flippant and clever and occasionally funny, but ultimately it's not enjoyable. ![]() ![]() Truth is, but for 34 pages in the middle of this novel, I didn't enjoy Ferris's debut at all. Because so many of the GoodReads folks are participants or graduates of MFA programs, and because Then We Came to the End by Joshua Ferris is so obviously the product of an MFA program, I thought to hedge and give this book three stars. ![]()
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