The imperfectionists- Rachman, Tom
Summary: Preoccupied by personal challenges while running a struggling  English-language newspaper in Rome, an obituary writer confronts  mortality, an eccentric publisher obsesses over his basset hound and  other staff members uncover the paper's founding by an impulsive  millionaire. A first novel. - (Baker & Taylor)
Kirkus Reviews
An English-language newspaper  headquartered in Rome brings together a strongly imagined cast of  characters in journalist Rachman's first novel. Lloyd Burko used to be a  stringer living in Paris. He's still in Paris, but now he's just an  impoverished former journalist who pretends to have a computer and whose  latest wife has moved in with the guy across the hall. Arthur Gopal is  languishing as an obituary writer until a death in his own life enables  his advancement by erasing his humanity. Hardy Benjamin is a business  writer, savvy and knowledgeable about corporate finance but utterly  hapless in romance. What they have in common is the never-named paper,  whose history is doled out in brief chapters beginning in 1953. The  novel's rich representation of expatriate existence surely benefits from  the author's experiences as an AP correspondent in Rome and an editor  at the International Herald Tribune in Paris; his thoroughly unglamorous  depictions of newsroom cubicles and editorial offices will resonate  with anyone who's had a corporate job. But, while the newspaper is its  unifying factor, the narrative's heart beats with the people who work  there. Rachman's ability to create a diverse group of fully formed  individuals is remarkable. Characters range from a kid just out of  college who learns the hard way that he doesn't want to be a reporter,  to an Italian diplomat's widow. Some are instantly sympathetic, others  hard to like. Each is vivid and compelling in his or her own way. The  individual stories work well independently, even better as the author  skillfully weaves them together. Cameo appearances become significant  when informed by everything the reader already knows about a character  who flits in and out of another's story. The novel isn't perfect. The  interpolated chapters about the paper's past aren't very interesting;  the final entry ends with a ghastly shock; and the postscript is too  cute. Nevertheless, it's a very strong debut. Funny, humane and artful.  Agent: Susan Golomb/Susan Golomb Agency Copyright Kirkus 2009 Kirkus/BPI  Communications.All rights reserved.
  
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