Repeat
Written by Neal Pollack
Narrated by Jeff Cummings
3/5
()
About this audiobook
Through strange metaphysical circumstances, failed screenwriter Brad Cohen finds himself caught in an infinite time loop, forced to relive the first forty years of his life again and again. Each “repeat,” Brad wakes up in the womb on what was supposed to be his fortieth birthday, with full knowledge of what’s come before. In various timelines, he becomes a successful political pundit, a game-show champion, a playboy, and a master manipulator of the stock market, but none of them seem to lead him out of his predicament. As he realizes he wants to break out of the loop and find the love of his life—the one he hadn’t appreciated the first time around—Brad tries, fails, and tries again to escape the eternal cycle of birth and rebirth. Repeat answers the question: If you could live half your life over, would you do things differently? Be careful what you wish for! Repeating is enough to drive a dude crazy.
Neal Pollack
Neal Pollack is the author of the bestselling memoir Alternadad and several books of satirical fiction, including The Neal Pollack Anthology of American Literature and the rock novel Never Mind the Pollacks. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and son.
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Reviews for Repeat
18 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Through strange metaphysical circumstances, failed screenwriter Brad Cohen finds himself caught in an infinite time loop, forced to relive the first forty years of his life again and again. Each "repeat," Brad wakes up in the womb on what was supposed to be his fortieth birthday, with full knowledge of what's come before. In various timelines, he becomes a successful political pundit, a game-show champion, a playboy, and a master manipulator of the stock market, but none of them seem to lead him out of his predicament. As he realizes he wants to break out of the loop and find the love of his life - the one he hadn't appreciated the first time around - Brad tries, fails, and tries again to escape the eternal cycle of birth and rebirth. Repeat answers the question: If you could live half your life over, would you do things differently? Be careful what you wish for! Repeating is enough to drive a dude crazy
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Think a sort of Eastern-mysticism influenced It's a Wonderful Life only with drugs, swearing, and sex replacing the angel.While predictable, it was funny and interesting, and I would have given it 4 stars except for one thing. In the end, instead of realizing his life was basically good, the protagonist instead realizes that he should accept his life as it is because life is suffering. Very Buddhist and very typical of my spoiled countrymen not to realize that our lives, in general, don't actually involve that much suffering. Frankly, I'm a little sick of hearing middle-class Americans stoically proclaim their acceptance of the first noble truth of Buddhism when they've been blessed with such amazing lives. The lack of perspective always strikes me as ungrateful.I received a complimentary copy of this book via a Goodreads giveaway. Many thanks to all involved in providing me with this opportunity.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Title: Repeat
Author: Neal Pollack
Publication Date: Mar 2015
Genre: Sci-Fi
Score: 4/5
Repeat was a pleasant surprise. It’s not perfect and an obvious derivation of Replay by Ken Grimwood but a very strong 3.5/5 regardless. It tells the story of a man caught in an infinite time loop who disappears on the eve of his fortieth birthday and reappears into his fetal self as he is being born. This happens hundreds of times and the story deals with his actions during these repeats. The ending is too abrupt. There’s no inciting event that causes his repeats to stop. I’m not sure he even learns anything worthwhile. But the ride there is fine and an easy read. Recommended. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In Neal Pollack’s novel Repeat, failed Hollywood screenwriter Brad Cohen ends up living the first forty years of his life over and over again in a ‘continuous time loop’. Pollack rebels against the initial instinct to resort to the repetitive actions of someone trying to accomplish the same thing over and over again, and this is probably what keeps the novel - for the most part - fresh. However, the avoidance of expectation throws a logical monkey wrench into the works from a narrative standpoint; before his ‘time loop’ begins, we are given a lengthy introduction to the main character’s waning career as a novelist and screenwriter, one of the main reasons he comes to consider himself an abject failure on the eve of his fortieth birthday. With the amount of time spent on this major aspect of the character, you would reasonably expect many of his ‘repeats’ to involve improving as a writer. Likewise, for a man separated from the love of his life by an infinite time loop, you would expect repeated attempts at igniting that romance again. Unfortunately, these are just some of the many expectations left wanting in a novel that, for the most part, tries to be funnier and deeper than it actually is.The bulk of Repeat, instead of sincerely delving into the metaphysical aspects of living one’s life over and over again, weighs heavily on self-referential name dropping and self-deprecating reflections that make it more and more apparent that the author’s biggest crime against his audience is not just making himself the main character and doing away with all of his thinly-veiled subterfuge. The narcissistic navel-gazing hits a brief fever-pitch in a chapter near the end of the book comprised of an article by an nameless Chicago journalist (guess who) that wraps up with a befuddled Brad Cohen providing the author’s doppelganger with Wikipedia-worthy description of his future achievements. It’s a stab at being cute/clever that falls far from Breakfast of Champions, and makes the following yoga-centric chapter (Hint: Pollack is into yoga) nearly unbearable.Self-deprecation is also a form of self-defense, and Pollack uses it to beat his critics to the punch early in the novel by having failed screenwriter Brad Cohen repeatedly weathering accusations that his television pilot concept sounds like a rehash of Groundhog Day. Whether it’s a thinly-veiled attempt to deflect his own insecurities or a stab at going ‘Meta’, it’s a comparison the reader doesn’t need spelled out. Perhaps Pollack’s mirror-gazing approach is to blame for what I found to be the biggest flaw in the story of Brad Cohen’s one hundred relived lifetimes, which is a lack of human connections. One of the biggest comments you will see in reviews of the book is unavoidable comparisons to Groundhog Day and It’s a Wonderful Life, but the one parallel absent from Pollack’s novel that these other referenced works feature is an attention to human relationships. While Brad Cohen’s wife and daughters are part of the launching-pad that he jettisons on his return to the womb, there is only one instance either described or eluded to that involves him trying to reunite with his wife throughout his entire 4,000 year journey. Great attention is given to financial success, professional achievement, and unrestrained hedonism, yet what is invariably glossed over is the potential for establishing, reestablishing, developing, or even investigating relationships with other people, familial or otherwise. Outside of his first life repeat’s journey through birth and infancy with an adult mind (his Mother’s nipple and diapers play a significant role in the humor throughout), Brad Cohen’s obsession with becoming a Jeopardy champion takes up more print space than his relationship with his parents, despite being forced to spend roughly a third of each repeated life living with them. This lack of intimacy extends to childhood friends, adult friends, or any kind of relationship that isn’t directly related to the overriding obsession with fortune and fame. Pollack’s character ricochets between materialistic hedonism and minimalist Zen philosophy without any substantive attempts to live any kind of life that involves forging new bonds. While it can argued that this is a flaw inherent in the character’s psyche, this is an assumption that shouldn’t have to be made on behalf of the author.Despite these criticisms, I would not say that Repeat was unenjoyable, only that the novel is overall – much like Brad Cohen’s repeated lives - a hit-or-miss experience. Also, to be fair, injecting yourself into the company of iconic classics such as Groundhog Day and It’s a Wonderful Life is an open invitation to falling short, regardless of how you try to diffuse that level of expectation in advance. Not being familiar with any of Pollack’s other works, I can only assume that this is not his best or worst attempt, and I don’t see any reason to treat it as either. It’s a passable novel, and if you’re looking to pass time (but not lifetimes), then you could do far worse.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Agonizing to go through each repeat. I couldn't deal with it. Maybe my own problem. Neal Pollack has a great sense of humor so if you can handle the rest, you may like it.