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    Random Acts of Heroic Love

    Random Acts of Heroic Love

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    Author: Danny Scheinmann
    Publisher: Doubleday
    Category: Book

    Buy Collectible: £52.00



    Used (2) Collectible (1) from £52.00

    Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 86 reviews
    Sales Rank: 151618

    Media: Hardcover
    Edition: Collectors edition
    Pages: 400
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
    Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.7

    ISBN: 0385612613
    EAN: 9780385612616
    ASIN: 0385612613

    Publication Date: August 1, 2007
    Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
    Condition: UK, Doubleday, 2007. Hardback with unclipped dustjacket. SIGNED, lined ("Love can vanquish death") and dated (20/07/07) by the author to the title page. First edition/first printing (1 in number string). Very fine/very fine. Unread and like new. DJ protected in a removable plastic cover. Debut novel. Book dispatched securely wrapped and protected in bubblewrap and a strong cardboard book box. Will be sent special delivery at no extra cost.(S7)

    Also Available In:

      • Paperback - Random Acts of Heroic Love
      • Hardcover - Random Acts of Heroic Love
      • Hardcover - Random Acts of Heroic Love (Charnwood)
      • Paperback - Random Acts of Heroic Love

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    Customer Reviews:   Read 81 more reviews...

    2 out of 5 stars Disappointing   January 8, 2009
    Like many people have written, I was really looking forward to this book but I found it a pretty feebly written and not terribly engaging account of lost love across the years. I'm sure we were meant to get an impression of young men struggling with overbearing emotions but the way this was presented - in the case of Leo Deakin in particular - was cumbersome and somehow did not ring true. The style of writing was infantile at times, especially when it tried to be profound, and all in all this book lacked any real subtlety or depth.


    5 out of 5 stars So emotional, it's in my top ten!   December 28, 2008
    It has been almost a year since I finished reading this amazing book, and I can still vividly remember the power of emotion it contained.

    From the very first page I was totally hooked. It tells two, interweaved tales . The first is set in 1992, and follows Leo Deakin, who wakes up in a South American hospital to discover that his girlfriend has died in the bus crash he survived. As he begins to remember what happened, he is plagued by the guilt that he was in some way to blame for her death.

    The second story is set in 1917, and follows Mortis Daniecki, as he escapes from a POW camp and makes an epic journey across Europe, to return to the love of his life.

    The story of Leo, is semi auto-biographical, as the author, Danny Scheinmann, also lost his girlfriend at a young age. Mortis's story is based on the real events of Danny Scheinmann's Grandfather's life, as explained in an epilogue to the book. I think that the fact the author has experienced a lot of the events described in the book really shows. The raw emotion is hard to ignore; it is the small, well observed details that make it all so realistic. I don't think I have ever read a book which explores the issues of grief and love so well.

    I highly recommend this book, it is one of my favourite books of 2008, and will probably be in my all time top ten, along with "A Fine Balance", "Fingersmith" and "Water for Elephants".



    5 out of 5 stars Love and History   December 7, 2008
    I loved this book and read it in just a few days. What do they usually say on the back cover? Unputdownable? Terrible word, but for, it hits the nail on the head with this book. Some previous reviewers thought that there was too much emphasis on Leo's suffering in trying to get over Eleni's death. Well, maybe so, but I thought the description of the terrible emotions he goes through was exceptional. I've lost people close to me, and when Leo talked to flies and ants as if they were his lost love, I smiled with sad recognition. And hey, you must admit, it's verging on the comic how he gets tangled up with his landlady!

    That's the great thing about Danny Scheinmann: he takes you to hell and back but he always gives you a good laugh in between.

    What none of the reviews I have read mentions is the historical aspect of the book. I am a European who speaks a few languages and has traveled a fair bit in Europe, and so, despite the fact that I was born well after the Second World War, the journey of Moritz had a tremendous affect on me. There aren't many books these days on the horrors and the tragic developments of the First World War, and none at all that I know of who attempts to describe the chaos in the East among the people of all social levels as the communists take over. And wasn't it brilliant how Moritz compares the horrors of the Bolsheviks with those committed by the Nazi? Plus the human aspect of it all: how on earth do people cope when their whole life is turned upside down: you grow up in one country or empire, go through a war and end up in an entirely new one, first white then red! This book is as if your own grandfather would finally talk about his experience in the war, but of course, they never did.

    So, you really have it all here: great language, historic insight and a truly touching story of love, loss and survival. A highly deserved 5 stars, and I really hope Scheinmann keeps writing!



    5 out of 5 stars A tender, passionate, well paced, skillfully written story ....   November 24, 2008
     1 out of 2 found this review helpful

    I've read a lot of the other reviews posted and this book seems pretty divisive - not what I expected. I personally loved it - I sobbed through the final chapters. It delivered on everything I expected. I'd call it truly an epic, one I will go back to read again and again. The different strands of the story are very carefully and patiently woven together. The characters are very skillfully portrayed - I felt so much tenderness for Leo's father. In all, this story was so very moving and beautifully written. Those 1 star reviewers must have hearts of made of granite!


    5 out of 5 stars Balanced Beautifully between plot and poetry   November 15, 2008
     1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    What I loved most about this book, is that fact that the author managed to write beautifully, and still weave a wonderful plot line, two in fact. I sometimes find books either have the plot, or the writing.

    I love the way the two stories parallels eachother, where two men are going through different fights, in different times, over different landscapes

    A Fantastic read, I've been suggesting it to all my friends, and even buying it for them just so I can guarantee they will read it


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