
Hector and the Secrets of Love
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

The sequel to HECTOR AND THE SEARCH FOR HAPPINESS assumes that listeners already know Hector. Here he is only vaguely introduced as a psychiatrist, possibly French, who is hired by a pharmaceutical company to find the runaway inventor of a love drug. Narrator James Clamp tells Hector's story with choppy timing and indistinguishable character voices. Conversations take place, but it's impossible to tell who is speaking. Some characters have accents, but there's no indication as to what country they're from--other characters are from a specific country, but they have no accent. The combination of awkward writing and poor narration makes for a difficult listening experience. Further, the secrets of love are simplistic. M.M.G. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine

June 6, 2011
A smarmy follow-up to Lelordâs first effort finds the placid French psychiatrist Hector enlisted in a pharmaceutical experiment that leaves him with romantic troubles of his own. Listening to his unhappy patients, Hector observes that âlove, it seemed, was an endless source of suffering,â bons mots he has experienced with his own girlfriend, Clara, a salesperson at a big pharmaceutical company. While accompanying Clara on her company retreat, Hector is persuaded by Gunther, the conniving company head, into tracking down a rogue American professor of Happiness Studies who has vanished into an unnamed Asian country with a new drug that allows people to fall in love with whomever they want and, moreover, stay in love. Just as Clara is taking up an affair with her boss, Hector sets out in search of the professor, who drops him notes and delivers some of the love potion by a comely messenger, Vayla. Hector and Vayla fall irretrievably in love, though are unable to speak to each other. Ever aware of the economic inequities between him and those he encounters, Hector exhibits nonetheless some conflicted feelings regarding the beauty and youth of the Asian womenâand lovely Vaylaâs slavish obedience to his every whim. Lelordâs saccharine tale delineates a universal, palatable message about attachment and need, self-interest and freedom.
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