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Dear American Airlines
Dear American Airlines
Author: Jonathan Miles
From the cocktails columnist of the New York Times, the scathingly funny, deeply moving story of a stranded passenger whose enraged letter of complaint transforms into a lament for a life gone awry. — Bennie Ford, a fifty-three-year-old failed poet turned translator, is traveling to his estranged daughter's wedding when his flight is canceled...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780547237909
ISBN-10: 0547237901
Publication Date: 6/2/2009
Pages: 192
Rating:
  • Currently 3.1/5 Stars.
 27

3.1 stars, based on 27 ratings
Publisher: Mariner Books
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Dear American Airlines on + 379 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
This short book is a gem. While Bennie's flight to his daughter's commitment ceremony is delayed in Chicago, he writes a letter to American Airlines to demand the money he paid for this flight be returned. What begins as a rant soon digresses into observations about his life that is alternately very funny and very poignant. I love Jonathan Miles' writing style - his words are precisely placed for maximum effect on, and reflection by, the readers of this novel. I hope he has another book in progress.
thebeakeeper avatar reviewed Dear American Airlines on + 167 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
i have been looking forward to reading this since i became a flight attendant over 3 years ago. i have been on the waiting list for my book swap group since then and finally recevied it.

my excitement dwindled after getting it and i learned two important lessons- never judge a book by its cover- or its title!!!!

i thought this was ging to be a book of letters to the airline from unhappy customers, or just one letter ranting about all of his awful experiences flying. i was so wrong.

its a fictional book about a guy on his way to his daughter's wedding. he gets stuck in chicago and decides to write a letter to american airlines. of the entire book- maybe a page is about his bad experience. the rest is his life story. and a not exciting life story at that. i kept waiting for the good stuff to come- and it never did.

the main character is also a translator so throughout this very long letter he includes translations of his current project. which bored the heck out of me.

at points it was painful to read (but i can never not finish a book). maybe if i knew what i was getting into i wouldve enjoyed it, but i had expectations which were not met.

such a disappointment.
reviewed Dear American Airlines on + 92 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Yep, we've all been inconvenienced by airlines, and sometimes too long, but that lament in the form of a letter turns to a life story of a drunk. Sorry, I have no real interest in listening to a self-destructive drunk who screws up his own and everyone who loves hims lives. Funny and tragic, and heart warming as some lines were, it kept hitting me that this is a drunk, lamenting one more time, poor me, if only! I did not enjoy this book
CMoonShell avatar reviewed Dear American Airlines on + 39 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Odd little book. First of all, it is fiction. It begins as a rant about how a cancelled flight causes a man to miss his estranged daughter's wedding. It rather quckly becomes a lament about his life and many choices he made. There are large sections about a book the main character is translating, which rather bored me. I'm sure there was material there that related to the main story, but I just couldn't stay interested in that side story. I did find the book interesting, in an odd sort of way.
Read All 5 Book Reviews of "Dear American Airlines"


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