Wednesday, Apr. 2, 2025--San Antonio
The Hypocrite by Jo Hamya was recommended as a top book of 2024 by several sources. I read it, and it was an interesting concept for a novel, but it was quite confusing at times, since the book was describing 3 different periods of time--a 3-month period a father and daughter spent in Sicily as he wrote a novel and she was invited there to assist him, and two simultaneous events occurring 10 years later--the mother and daughter having lunch together and discussing their lives while the father (divorced from the wife since the daughter was a young child) watches a matinee of a play the daughter has written which seems to be a criticism of what happened that summer. By the end of the book, I did not care for any of the characters. They are all very self-centered. The father has always had sloppy, inconsiderate habits which bother those around him and which he seems to think are okay ways for him to be. The mother divorced him for those reasons and seems to have tried to punish him by limiting his time with the daughter while collecting as much child support as possible (since he is a very successful author). The daughter is the worst of all of them, however. She is a 30 year old who feels that she has been slighted constantly by everyone in her life. She is always ready to tell anyone else (even strangers on the street) how they are offending her by what they are saying or how they are acting. In my opinion, it's time for all of them to go their separate ways and to never have anything to do with each other ever again; otherwise, there will never be any peace in their lives. But I expect, the same problems will arise with anyone else who becomes involved personally with any one of the three. I was so glad to see the book come to an end. I gave it 3 1/2 stars out of 5 not because I didn't like the characters but because it was such a complicated construction of a novel that I found myself having to figure out too often what was happening and where and when.