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Reviews for Saul and Patsy

 Saul and Patsy magazine reviews

The average rating for Saul and Patsy based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2009-06-15 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 4 stars Michael Burke
Saul and Patsy are in love. (Maybe too much so, according to Saul's mother, who thinks it's show-offy to be so in love and that it makes other people uncomfortable). They live in a small town in Michigan, off a dirt road, where they have moved from the east coast because of Saul's whim to be a teacher. "Saul and Patsy": yet another sigh-inducing and pleasant Charles Baxter novel. Saul is neurotic, in his own head, and wishes the rest of the world was like Patsy. Meanwhile, she is the voice of reason, the laid-back meh, maybe-I'll-work-at-a-bank half of the relationship, talking Saul off the ledge (or roof, as the case may be). More than building up to some sort of frenzied climax, the novel follows them quietly through little chapters of their life: That time they flipped the car after that party; Saul's albino deer sightings; Patsy's intuition toward what, if anything, is growing in her uterus. Characters drift in and out, including Saul's mom, who has taken a 17-year-old lover. Saul's student Gordy, from a remedial writing class, starts showing up in their front yard and staring at the house. Saul drives Gordy home, and this strange boy shows up again and again. Eventually the student does something that reads like the last chapter of a book, but instead instigates a city-wide cult-like following and puts Saul and Patsy in the spotlight. Gah. I love Charles Baxter. You can read a paragraph and something major happens right in the middle of it and you think "Wait. Did that just happen?" He never quickens the pace of plays a loco clarinet to announce that something big is on the horizon. It just happens. Next scene. He can take a story of a lovey dovey two-some, dangle tragedy in front of them, and then make it go away. He's unpredictable even in the most everyday, no-frills story. But best of all, if you read it slowly enough, you can hear Morgan Freeman narrating it. Just like he did in the film adaptation of Baxter's novel "Feast of Love." And, lo, if that isn't fun.
Review # 2 was written on 2021-01-24 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 4 stars Yasuyuki Koketsu
No I didn't see anything coming!!!


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