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Reviews for Flights of Love

 Flights of Love magazine reviews

The average rating for Flights of Love based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-05-06 00:00:00
2002was given a rating of 3 stars Mike Krause
"Flights of Love" is a collection of seven short stories that center on love. These are not sweet, sentimental stories since the protagonists are German men, mostly lawyers or law students, that view their emotions with cool, analytic minds. The stories are about communication problems, love that has lost passion, regrets, and midlife crisis mentalities. A few stories deal with the way that people regard younger Germans (who were not alive during World War II) because the Holocaust had such devastating effects, including a story about the love of a young man for a painting with a questionable provenance. As a group, the stories are a mixed bag with some having a heavy feeling to them.
Review # 2 was written on 2012-03-25 00:00:00
2002was given a rating of 5 stars Jose Borges
I have never really been one for short stories. Something in them doesn't suit me and they generally leave me with a feeling of dissatisfaction. This collection, by Bernhard Schlink of The Reader fame, could not have made me feel more different. With the thread running through them all, these stories examines our shared, fundamental desire to find love but the many different forms that love, that one, lasting relationship can take. The characters leading these stories are all very different people and yet Schlink is able to draw out this common need in all of them whilst skilfully creating a range of atmoshperes and feelings for the reader. Whilst some of the stories create empathy for the pain and guilt of its protagonists, others haunt and still others are shot through with almost wicked humour. Of all of them, my favourite to read was 'Sugar Peas' in which the rogue-ish Thomas takes himself off for a year, masquerading as a monk (of the fictitious Order of St. Thomas - vain sod!. He has worn himself out keeping three lives going at once: his family in Berlin with his wife with whom her runs an architectural firm, his 'second family' of Veronika and their daughter Klara in Hamburg, where she sells his paintings through her gallery, and his girlfriend Helga, back in Berlin again, who is young, determined, and whose dental clinic he is financing. When a dreadful accident brings his escape to an end, his self-involvement and selfishness comes back to bite him and we are left in no doubt as to where the power now lies! The most effecting, however, is probably the story that concludes the collection - 'The Woman at the Gas Station'. This story has such a well of sadness in it as the man in it is confronted by the fact that his life, which has been held together by the rituals and habits of a not unhappy marriage, has not made him happy when a long-held dream comes before him as a possible reality. This story was a poignant note on which to end the collection, but I wished there had been more.


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