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A Simple Plan

A Simple Plan
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Manufacturer: Simon & Schuster Audio
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From the author of The Ruins comes his debut New York Times bestselling thriller

A SIMPLE PLAN

Read by Griffin Dunne

Hank Mitchell thought he lived an ordinary, ordered life. But on one chilly afternoon, Hank, his brother Jacob, and Jacob's unsavory pal Lou, make a discovery that offers a chance for a life filled with riches beyond their wildest dreams. And in a fateful moment, Hank lays a plan to claim that life . . . and the horrific crumbling of his ordered world begins . . .

 

What Customers Say About A Simple Plan:

I love that the crows are aggressive and that they inhabit the interior of the plane, and I love that little hole that a crow makes right in the center of Hank's forehead, the one that bleeds and then forms a scab rather quickly (Holy Significant Metaphor).I'll keep reading. The thing that keeps me reading would have to be the characters. But soon the novel turned into a tale of the two brothers (interesting) and then into something else.I can see the structure of the novel and think it is graphically simple (Bad things will ensue, etc etc). The one part where I *almost* did not continue was the part where Hank confesses something particularly heinous to his wife over a spaghetti dinner (Honestly, this has got to be the coolest 8-month-pregnant woman since Frances McDormand's character in "Fargo") and I just thought her reaction was way too accepting.The parts that I like the best (so far) have to do with the crows. I have to come clean and say I'm only a fourth of the way in, but I'll go ahead and leave my impressions anyway.The first few paragraphs were tremendous. With such a beginning, I wondered how the author could sustain the tension for a few hundred pages. I find it fairly interesting that Hank has hidden layers (of malevolence), and that his wife is rather stoic.

You will find it hard to set the book down so try to read it over a weekend when you have lots of spare time. Well, be careful what you wish for. We fantasize about suddenly becoming financially independent and what we could do with all that money. You will become increasingly tense as you read this book and try not to get your heart set on a happily ever after ending. I can't imagine a more powerful warning regarding the destructive power of greed. Many of us have probably dreamed of finding a large amount of money that leaves no clue of who it might have belonged to. Given the innate greed and grabbiness of the human heart, sudden riches often has a less than satisfactory result in human lives.

Thumbs down x 5 for this one. How could his wife - a mother and seemingly kind and thoughtful person, time after time, condone his actions. This book reveals the most incredulous storyline I have ever read and believe me that says I lot becuase over the years I've read thousands of books. How could a mild-mannered, ordinary accountant be transformed into a thoughlessly cruel serial killer. It is a page turner because we want to see who he is going to kill next and what bizarre actions will follow-not because it is a well-written, positively thought-provoking read.

Though called "A Simple Plan," the ugly occurrences in Scott B. Ironically, amid all the backstabbing that goes on, brothers Hank and Jacob, previously distant from one another, become much closer. Perhaps because he's the narrator, Hank may be the most interesting study in personality. Capable of bludgeoning another human being, Hank inexplicably gets queasy feeling his unborn child kick in his wife's stomach; he can't stand watching her nurse the baby; and he feels like he's "eavesdropping" on her when she's on the phone and they're in the same room. As in real life, the twists of fate and what-ifs splattered throughout this story make even the smallest events substantial. Their reflective conversations and eventual reconnecting are one touching aspect to the book.

Though "normal" by society's standards, Hank's subtle quirks, rampant deceit, shyness and aloofness may slightly help explain some of his dastardly deeds. In the capable hands of Smith, the bad karma that drops upon the couple in the end doesn't feel contrived. It's a story about tested morals, fate, risks, taking sides, paranoia and, most scary of all, the raging greed that money can produce in even the most ordinary of people. From there, numerous other "fateful" events pile up, justifying certain actions in the minds of a few of the characters.

If nothing else, "A Simple Plan" teaches two cliched but valuable lessons: Money isn't everything, and crime doesn't pay. Smith's unembellished dialogue and writing style, in fact, give "A Simple Plan" an authentic feel to match the snowy Midwestern setting that always seems to be filled with foreboding crows and a deadened sense of misery. But as things progress, fate takes a backseat to avarice, bloodshed and all-out suspicions. "A Simple Plan" is a riveting tale about three ordinary but different men who find a boatload of cash in a wrecked plane and the chaos that ensues following their discovery.

Smith's novel are anything but straightforward and easy. Though the plot is stellar, what keeps me coming back to this book are the characters: The narrator, Hank, an educated accountant and family man whose life spirals downward with every choice he decides upon; his take-charge wife, Sarah, whose conniving, sometimes foolish, suggestions often make matters much more harrowing; Hank's brother, Jacob, a high school dropout and loner who comes across as the sympathetic one in the book; and Lou, the only friend of Jacob, whose rough-around-the-edges personality causes nothing but worry to Hank and Sarah. Halfway through the story, Hank realizes that he and his wife live an insular, solitary existence with hardly any friends. Human interaction is acutely captured by the author, as the cold, bleak barrenness of Ohio suburbia stands in marked contrast to the anxiety-filled emotions and actions of all the characters involved.

An innocent question by one of the main characters, "Is that a plane." gets this book off and running. At the most basic level, the wrecked plane wouldn't have even been discovered by the three men had a fox not darted out in front of the truck they were traveling in on a wintry Ohio road. Though none of these characteristics are necessarily indicative of a murderer, as time goes on it's evident that Hank and Sarah are selfish, evil people despite their tendency to rationalize all their actions in the name of a fortune that will provide an easy life ahead.

The darkness just couldn't be stopped due to the greed of the people involved. The novel felt like a modern Shakespeare tale. It's a simple story, but that doesn't mean boring, it's one of the best novels I've read in quite awhile. I liked this movie, so I decided to buy the book. It was even better. The wife, coldly changing and directing from the back reminded me of Lady Macbeth, but in some ways worse.

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