Beschreibung
Details
Einband
Gebundene Ausgabe
Erscheinungsdatum
26.04.2022
Verlag
Ingram Publishers ServicesSeitenzahl
240
"Ingrid works on a gargantuan cruise ship where she spends her days reorganizing the gift shop shelves and waiting for long-term guests to drop dead in the aisles. On her days off, she disembarks from the ship, wasting the hours aimlessly following tourists around, drinking the local alcohol, and buying clothes she never intends to wear. It's not a bad life. At least it distracts her from thinking about the other life--the other person--she left behind five years ago. That is, until the day she is selected by the ship's enigmatic captain and (ill-informed) wabi-sabi devotee, Keith, for his mysterious mentorship program. Encouraging her to reflect on past mistakes and her desperation to remain lost at sea, Keith pushes Ingrid further than she ever thought possible. But as her friendships and professional life onboard steadily fall apart, Ingrid must ask herself: how do you know when you have gone too far?
Unsere Kundinnen und Kunden meinen
Der Sinn des Lebens: Weil alles aus dem Nichts kommt und wieder im Nichts verschwindet.
easymarkt3 am 03.06.2022
Bewertungsnummer: 1723560
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)
Seit fünf Jahren auf einem Kreuzfahrtschiff in diversen Tätigkeiten im Rotationsverfahren eingesetzt ist Ingrid in diesem Zeitraum auf der Suche nach dem Sinn ihres Lebens. Wie bewältigen die Menschen ihr Leben? Die Lösung präsentiert sich ihr wie ein Stoppschild: Sie trinken. So hat es auch bei ihr angefangen, bei einer kaputten Ehe, einem unerfüllten Kinderwunsch und exzessivem Alkoholkonsum besonders bei den Landgängen. Sie denkt über ihr altes Leben nach und ihr wird schlecht bei diesen Erinnerungen.
Der Schiffskapitän Keith wählt sie für ein fragwürdiges Mentoren-Programm vor mit seltsamen, verrückten Maßnahmen zur Selbstoptimierung wie die Amputation eines Fingers, anfangs auch um die japanische Ästhetik des Wabi-Sabi. Welchen Sinn soll all das machen? Vielleicht um ein Zeichen zu setzen, um bereit zu sein für ein neues Leben ohne (Selbst-)Täuschung? Das Kreuzfahrtschiff, die WA genannt, diese Maßnahme und o.g. Programm sollte das Beste aus Ingrid herausholen. Endlich ist sie so weit.
Insgesamt etwas schwer ‚verdaulich‘ und zu langatmig zum Lesen.
Lara Williams - The Odyssey
Miss.mesmerized am 18.04.2022
Bewertungsnummer: 1697496
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)
It’s been five years now that Ingrid has left her husband and former life to work on board the luxury cruise liner WA. She regularly has to rotate between the different departments and thus has become an expert of the ship and knows every corner. With Mia and her brother Ezra, she has befriended two colleagues with whom she passes her limited free time. When she is selected for a mentorship programme and promoted to manager, things become more complicated between them, Mia is obviously envious of her friend’s new position. Yet, Ingrid is not sure if she can fulfil the high expectations of Keith, captain and guru of the team. But she is willing to give all – and that is more than you could ever imagine.
After having finished reading “The Odyssey”, I was left wondering and confused. Lara Williams’ novel was a hilarious read until it wasn’t anymore. It is somehow a totally exaggerated caricature of the cruise ship and well-being industries and on the other hand, from the middle of the novel on, I was wondering if the plot actually takes place on a cruise ship or if much rather the staff are actually patients of a psychiatric ward for whom the “cruise ship” is a kind of simulation of real life.
The cruise liner offer all a tourist might want to ask, there is no need to leave it since you have several restaurants serving all tastes, all kinds of shops and treatments to make your stay a perfect break-out. It doesn’t matter that the staff is hardly trained, they are friendly and the guest is king. Just as the employees are pretend-professionals, all aboard is just fake and serving a superficial image of perfection. Had social media not been invented yet, this cruise liner would surely underline the need for it.
Ingrid’s past is slowly revealed throughout the novel. That she more or less fled her former life is obvious, however, the reasons remain in the dark for a long time. The non-life she leads has become the perfect escape and spending hours in her small cabin staring at the ceiling is all she wants to do. The mentorship programme forces her to get out of her cave and think about herself and her life. Keith is the ultimate travesty of a guru. His concept is quite limited but with enough cold water and matcha tea he can create a spiritual atmosphere to impress his underlings.
This might all be very funny if it wasn’t for the fact that it seemed much too real to me. Even though the cruise ship is a special setting, what happens there is not too far from our life that has become more online fake than real for many and where behind the sparkly facade, you can find highly insecure and troubled people. Reckless gurus can easily become leaders spreading their nonsense and making masses of people follow their rules not matter how senseless.
A novel you can laugh out loud while reading but which leaves you with an uneasy feeling when thinking about what you’ve just read.