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Mr. Peanut
Mr Peanut
Author: Adam Ross
David Pepin has loved his wife since the moment they met, and after thirteen years of marriage he still can’t imagine living without her?yet he obsessively contemplates her demise. Soon she is dead, and he’s both deeply distraught and the prime suspect. — The officers investigating her death are intimately familiar with conjuga...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780307270702
ISBN-10: 030727070X
Publication Date: 6/22/2010
Pages: 352
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 22

3.2 stars, based on 22 ratings
Publisher: Knopf
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Mr. Peanut on
Helpful Score: 2
If you like being spoon-fed a plot, this book is not for you. It's layered and "chewy," to quote Stephen King. It's definitely a story that you either "get" or not and it'll make you really think about relationships...both in general and about those in your life. Contrary to how it may be catergorized, this not a police procedural, nor is it a murder mystery. It's a brutally honest look at marriage, relationships and the love long-term couples may rediscover if it's not too late.

Be prepared to think and dive deeply into this amazing story...
reviewed Mr. Peanut on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I was intrigued the hype around this book. Seems readers fall into two camps -- those who love it and those who don't care for it at all. I'm in the loving it camp.

This is as much a story about marriage as it is a mystery. There's a lot going on in this book. It takes a lot of twists and turns. There are really three (maybe four, actually...), stories within this story. The author is very imaginative though and does a great job of keeping you guessing while pulling it altogether nicely at the end. It was a very enjoyable read.
Chocoholic avatar reviewed Mr. Peanut on + 291 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This is the story of the married life of David and Alice Pepin. Alice has a number of allergies and has some health issues and David frequently contemplates her death. When Alice turns up dead, the story becomes a whodunit.... did David kill her? Was it suicide? Did something else happen to Alice? There is more than one story contained in this novel; the other being the story of Sam Sheppard, the detective investigating Alice's death and who was also charged with the death of his own wife in the past. The author has quite skillfully woven together the two stories in much the same way that MC Escher drew fanciful drawings of people, gnomes, birds, and fish on a continuum between black and white. This story is not to be read so much as it is to be experienced. Even now after finishing reading the story, I'm not entirely certain what happened to Alice and that is a testament to how well the author wrote this book. I enjoyed this book and it kept my interest very well although the chapters are very long; one chapter is well over 100 pages.
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starfkr avatar reviewed Mr. Peanut on + 53 more book reviews
An entertaining thriller of sorts. I enjoyed it very much.
reviewed Mr. Peanut on + 289 more book reviews
Adam Rosss debut novel Mr. Peanut is a moving exploration of the highs and lows of marriage. Alice Pepin is found dead from peanut-induced anaphylaxis in her New York apartment after she begins a mysterious, finally-successful weight loss campaign. Her husband David, a successful computer game designer trying to bring his novel to completion, is a prime suspect being investigated by two detectives with particular issues in their own marriages. Ward Hastrolls wife has suddenly and stubbornly stopped getting out of bed. His partner is the Sam Sheppard convicted of killing his wife in 1954 but later acquitted at a new trial. A shadowy figure called Mobius further complicates the picture. More than a mystery, this recursive story resembles the Escher drawings that inspire Davids games as it explores the depths of the marriage bond, love and hate. Rosss prose is inspired, although a couple of examples of sloppy editing made me worry how well the pieces of the story fit together. In the end the sections on Hastroll and Sheppard do not neatly tie in, except for the marriage theme. In short, I found this book to be a rich, arresting meditation on human faults and emotions, imagination and reality, partly inspired by Alfred Hitchcocks films.


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