Less

4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars | 38,728 ratings

Price: 17.05

Last update: 08-09-2024


About this item

A breakout romantic comedy by the best-selling author of five critically acclaimed novels.

Who says you can't run away from your problems?

You are a failed novelist about to turn 50. A wedding invitation arrives in the mail: Your boyfriend of the past nine years is engaged to someone else. You can't say yes - it would be too awkward - and you can't say no - it would look like defeat. On your desk are a series of invitations to half-baked literary events around the world.

Question: How do you arrange to skip town?

Answer: You accept them all.

What would possibly go wrong?

Arthur Less will almost fall in love in Paris, almost fall to his death in Berlin, barely escape to a Moroccan ski chalet from a Saharan sandstorm, accidentally book himself as the (only) writer-in-residence at a Christian Retreat Center in Southern India, and encounter, on a desert island in the Arabian Sea, the last person on Earth he wants to face. Somewhere in there: He will turn 50. Through it all there is his first love. And there is his last.

Because despite all these mishaps, missteps, misunderstandings, and mistakes, Less is, above all, a love story.

A scintillating satire of the American abroad, a rumination on time and the human heart, a bittersweet romance of chances lost, by an author the New York Times has hailed as "inspired, lyrical", "elegiac", and "ingenious" as well as "too sappy by half", Less shows a writer at the peak of his talents raising the curtain on our shared human comedy.


Top reviews from the United States

Books on our Brains Society/ Barbara
5.0 out of 5 stars For anyone who has ever loved another
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2018
When you put four well-read, middle-aged, opinionated women together to discuss a book, it’s rare you get any kind of unanimity of opinion, but Less, the Pulitzer Prize winning novel, was the exception. We all rated it 5/5.
Many people, I think, fall into the trap of believing a “great” book cannot be funny. For a book to be considered worthy it must be ponderous and serious. It has to deal with “heavy’ issues. Well, Less deals with one of life’s heaviest issues: love. And it does so with humor.
Arthur Less, a gay novelist with a minor literary success to his credit, is about to turn 50, which is difficult enough, but he also has to deal with his former (much younger) lover’s marriage to someone else. Arthur can neither attend the wedding nor refuse to attend, so he searches through his collection of mail and takes out every invitation to a conference or award presentation he has received in the prior year and decides to accept them all. This takes him literally around the world to Mexico, Italy, France, Morocco, Japan, and India giving him an excuse not to have to see the love of his life say “I do” to someone else.
His travels bring him into contact with a number of “characters” while he deals with his memories of past loves, and the pain of losing his most recent lover, Freddy, to someone else. All these vignettes allow the reader to get a firmer grasp on Arthur Less as a person, and he turns out to be both enigmatic and endearing. The one trait that is clear is he truly loves FreddEdity. Truly, madly, deeply. His travels to avoid attending the marriage don’t allow him to avoid his feelings and memories.
Less has a satisfying ending (which I would never spoil), and that isn’t easy.
When you put four well-read, middle-aged, opinionated women together to discuss a book, it’s rare you get any kind of unanimity of opinion, but Less, the Pulitzer Prize winning novel, was the exception. We all rated it 5/5.
Many people, I think, fall into the trap of believing a “great” book cannot be funny. For a book to be considered worthy it must be ponderous and serious. It has to deal with “heavy’ issues. Well, Less deals with one of life’s heaviest issues: love. And it does so with humor.
Arthur Less, a gay novelist with a minor literary success to his credit, is about to turn 50, which is difficult enough, but he also has to deal with his former (much younger) lover’s marriage to someone else. Arthur can neither attend the wedding nor refuse to attend, so he searches through his collection of mail and takes out every invitation to a conference or award presentation he has received in the prior year and decides to accept them all. This takes him literally around the world to Mexico, Italy, France, Morocco, Japan, and India giving him an excuse not to have to see the love of his life say “I do” to someone else.
His travels bring him into contact with a number of “characters” while he deals with his memories of past loves, and the pain of losing his most recent lover, Freddy, to someone else. All these vignettes allow the reader to get a firmer grasp on Arthur Less as a person, and he turns out to be both enigmatic and endearing. The one trait that is clear is he truly loves Freddy. Truly, madly, deeply. His travels to avoid attending the marriage don’t allow him to avoid his feelings and memories.
Less has a satisfying ending (which I would never spoil), and that isn’t easy.
(Linda)

You could say it's a gay story. Others have. But really it's a love story, universal in its theme of love, loss, aging, triumph, acceptance and resolution. So please don't let that stop you from reading this wonderful, funny, heartbreaking book. Arthur Less is Everyman, or even Everywoman, who has ever been in love.
And the descriptive writing! A marvel of beautiful run on sentences dripping with similes and metaphors. I felt the narrator, revealed at the end of the book, literally drilled me into each new scene with machine gun speed and accuracy. Masterful!
(Barbara)

I was reading a piece in the LA Times by Quinn Cummings as she paid tribute to the great Neil Simon. As a 9-year-old she starred in the stage production of The Goodbye Girl with Marsha Mason as her mother. She remarked that “to be meaningful, comedy needs to be about discomfort, about being the outsider……..” And certainly Andrew Sean Greer succeeded when he wrote Less. The subtle humor made me smile throughout the book, from his backwards laugh (ah ah ah) to his brilliant blue suit to the bumbling happenings in each of the countries traveled. And in each of those countries he began to find himself.

I loved the beautifully written prose from the very beginning of the book. How can you not love this: “By his forties, all he has managed to grow is a gentle sense of himself, akin to the transparent carapace of a soft-shelled crab.” The metaphors and similes throughout the book were memorable as were his reminiscences of having lived with a genius in his early adulthood.

My friend Barbara once explained to me that the most difficult part about writing a story is writing the ending, and after having read hundreds of books I can see that few really achieve this well. Greer is an exception because the ending here is perfect.

(Marianne)
Julie R.
4.0 out of 5 stars a delight
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2024
Never heard of the author prior to opening up this book. I was in for a delightful surprise. Beautifully written and quite funny…poignant and hopeful. Highly recommend.
Elizabeth L. Boyer
5.0 out of 5 stars Why? Because…
Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2024
I just finished my first 5❤️book of 2024, Less by Andrew Sean Greer. The 2018 Pulitzer Prize winner for fiction, it is well deserved. I laughed, I (almost) cried, I couldn’t put it down. It was delightful .

My number one requirement to rank a book this high is that I have to love the main character. Not just like - love enough to want them to be my best friend. That’s how I feel about Arthur Less. But the author also makes me fall in love with a myriad of other fascinating characters. I love Freddy and Robert and even despicable Carlos. I love the boy in the airport and the pastor in Thiruvananthapuram and the hostess in Kyoto.

Is this a novel or a travelogue? Yes and yes. As we travel with our sad, down-on-his-luck, gay writer, we get to see the world through his very unique eyes. And what a vision. Each line, no matter how irrelevant, becomes a descriptive narrative that is some of the finest writing I’ve encountered. Biplane dragonflies dogfights - indeed!

There is a sequel- I am starting it today.
CounterCulture
3.0 out of 5 stars The Pulitzer is going the PC way of the Oscars...
Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2018
While well-crafted, "Less" didn't seem authentic. A "small" novel about a man facing his age, without emotional intensity, or intellectual sparkle, or even humor, though the hero tells us in no uncertain terms how to read it: as a grand gay Ulysses, significant to the PC crowd because it shows how the post-AIDS gay male generation deals with turning 50. Turns out, like everyone else!

In reality, it's more of a lesser "Eat, Pray, Love" with an intellectual gay character and a lighthearted touch. While Elisabeth Gilbert comes across as a natural, intense, brutally honest writer, Greer seems to be the opposite type. Deliberate and mild and self-conscious, pushing all the right social and literary buttons while pretending to humbly avoid them. Arthur Less is an empty and average human being, desolate after a long casual affair with a younger man ended, and, with it, a decade of his living at the surface of life...The style is a mix of fresh metaphors and beautiful sentences, with some passages that felt contrived and unnecessary. Some chapters were quite good, at least half were dull. The substance never dives deep; the hero stays on the debonair surface, he is always conveniently lucky, like the author who received a Pulitzer for a modest book that could have been easily passed unnoticed.

The Pulitzer is going the PC way of the Oscars: searching minority works to award even if they are just so and so, as a nod toward that community as a whole. Unlike "The Sympathizer," my favorite Pulitzer in recent years, this novel failed to make a great impact on me. I skipped many pages in the second half, just to see how the novel ended. It's the type of book where if you remove half of the pages or chapters the "whole" remains pretty much the same. Since the days of Aristotle's Poetics, this is the biggest faux-pas of literary composition, but either the Pulitzer Board is lowering the standards to ensure it sends the "right" message, or the Pulitzer Board members themselves fail to know the basics these days and whoever appointed them had lowered the standards.

One of my most favorite authors of all times, Oscar Wilde, was gay, therefore I was expecting more!

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