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What's Eating Gilbert Grape

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Just about everything in Endora, Iowa (pop. 1,091 and dwindling) is eating Gilbert Grape, a twenty-four-year-old grocery clerk who dreams only of leaving. His enormous mother, once the town sweetheart, has been eating nonstop ever since her husband's suicide, and the floor beneath her TV chair is threatening to cave in. Gilbert's long-suffering older sister, Amy, still mourns the death of Elvis, and his knockout younger sister has become hooked on makeup, boys, and Jesus--in that order, but the biggest event on the horizon for all the Grapes is the eighteenth birthday of Gilbert's younger brother, Arnie, who is a living miracle just for having survived so long. As the Grapes gather in Endora, a mysterious beauty glides through town on a bicycle and rides circles around Gilbert, until he begins to see a new vision of his family and himself.

319 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1991

About the author

Peter Hedges

16 books134 followers
Peter Hedges is an American novelist, screenwriter, and film director. His novel What's Eating Gilbert Grape was adapted into a critically acclaimed movie of the same title, which launched his film career.

In 2002 he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay for About a Boy. In the same year, he wrote and directed Pieces of April, starring Katie Holmes, which he dedicated to his mother.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 804 reviews
Profile Image for Brina.
1,121 reviews4 followers
November 27, 2016
What's Eating Gilbert Grape originally came out when I was in high school. As per my mother's rule, one had to read the book before viewing the movie so I read the story of the Grape family before venturing to watch the film starring Johnny Depp and Leonardo DiCaprio. Peter Hedges created many memorable characters in small town Endora, Iowa, also known derogatorily by Gilbert as Endora of the line. A touching story about a dysfunctional family wasting away as their mother Bonnie eats herself into oblivion, I rooted for Gilbert to get out of town the entire time. It has been twenty years since I read this charming novel, but Gilbert, Arnie, and Bonnie have stayed with me, and I recommend Peter Hedges' work to any looking for a book about small town America.
Profile Image for Jesse.
155 reviews71 followers
April 12, 2023
What's eating Gilbert Grape? His dads dead, his mom, the "walrus", is eatting herself to death, his little sister is a bitch, a slut, and an abnoxioyusly devout christian, his brother is a "retard" (his word not mine), his friends are all idiots, his job is a complete dead end, his love interests are a 40ish year old mom or a 15 year old weirdo (Glibert is 24), the town he lives in is slowly dying, and there's absolutly nothing he can to do about any of it. So, what's eating Gilbert Grape? EVERYTHING!!! Everything is eating Gilbert Grape.

Young Gilbert Grape is a level 5 ass hole. He's an ass hole to his family. He's an ass hole to his friends. He's an ass hole to the women who show any interest in him. He's just an ass hole. The question is, can we blame Gilbert for being an ass hole? He lives in small town Iowa,where nothing ever happens. His family is the picture of dysfunction. He has absolutely nothing going for him, and everything going against him. So no, I dont think we can put all the blame on our friend Gilbert for being a world-class ass hole. But that still doesn't change the fact that he wasn't a very likable character, and since the entire book is from Gilbert's perspective, I found it somewhat of a letdown.

Overall, it wasn't great, but it wasn't terrible, a little weird,  a little sad, a little funny, but mostly just ok.
Profile Image for Evie.
468 reviews68 followers
July 2, 2014
“You can tell the idyllic nature of a family by the upkeep of its picnic table. Ours is its own indictment. We are splintering and peeling. We rot.” – Gilbert Grape


Before Jonathan Safran Foer was the talk of literary circles for writing Everything is Illuminated at such a young age, there was Peter Hedges. What's Eating Gilbert Grape is his profound post-coming-of-age novel about twenty-four year old Gilbert Grape, a grocery store stock boy living in the tiny town of Endora, Iowa. Grappling with the desire to leave town and start an exciting life elsewhere, and the guilt and responsibility to stay and care for his family, he is unprepared when a beautiful young girl from the big city comes to town, and unexpectedly helps him come to terms with his feelings about his family and their past.

Considering how old Hedges was when he wrote this, it too was equally profound. Being a fan of the movie though, the book was definitely more gratifying. Gilbert is a complex young man, and several times I found myself thinking about how Johnny Depp was the perfect actor for this character. I was also struck by the loving relationship Gilbert has with his disabled brother, Arnie, probably one of the most astute characters in the book. I am so glad I found this book (for one dollar, no less). It seemed to be the perfect time to read it and reflect on the different crossroads we come to at various stages in our life, and the thoughts that pervade our mind in an attempt to ensure that we're making the best decision possible.
Profile Image for Madeline.
794 reviews47.9k followers
December 10, 2007
One of the few books where I enjoyed the movie version more. Here are some unsettling things about the book version that got left out of the movie:
-Gilbert is kind of an asshole, especially the way he constantly refers to his brother as "the retard." Not even Johnny Depp could have made that a likeable trait.
-Becky, Gilbert's love interest, is fourteen. He is in his mid-twenties. They do not sleep together, but they definitely want to, and it is creepy.
-Glbert's younger sister goes on a date with the owner of the funeral home. She is fifteen, and they are discovered together in the back of the funeral car. Ew.

If you liked the movie, you might find this book interesting, but I wholeheartedly prefer the movie.
Profile Image for Caroline .
463 reviews664 followers
December 20, 2019
***NO SPOILERS***

What’s eating Gilbert Grape? In short, a lot:

-His general ennui and restlessness in tiny, dead-end Endora, Iowa
-His morbidly obese mother
-His intellectually handicapped brother
-His romantic relationship

This is not all. Further topics Peter Hedges wrote about are as follows:

-Economic depression
-Adultery
-Sudden death
-Family shame
-Suicide

It’s too much, and it’s the book’s biggest flaw. Nevertheless, Hedges didn’t explore these to an equal degree. Endora is just wallpaper. The adultery is randomly tossed in, as is a sudden death and Gilbert’s romance. The economic depression is disappointingly undeveloped. Hedges wanted to stuff it all into one book, but he couldn’t; that would've meant a book 1,000 pages long.

Hedges’s most promising story lines involve Gilbert’s obese mother, Bonnie, and intellectually handicapped brother, Arnie. I was therefore most disappointed that he didn’t develop these characters, especially Bonnie, as well as he could.

She’s reduced to a sleeping, eating, demanding lump, a passive figure who I learned about more via narration from Gilbert rather than via direct characterization. There’s only brief backstory, but what’s clear is that there’s a lot eating her, and that has a great deal of relevance to what’s eating Gilbert. Gilbert resents what a burden she is, but that’s only ever apparent because of his references to her as a “whale” or “walrus.” The story demands she be more developed.

Along the same lines, Arnie comes across as little more than a mischievous sprite who enjoys climbing Endora’s water tower and is always in need of a good scrubbing. Intellectually handicapped characters beg for multi-dimensional depictions (think Flowers for Algernon). The story demands more…everything about him.

Of everyone in the Grape family, Bonnie and Arnie are the most intriguing, but what’s most important is they’re the ones trapping Gilbert in Endora. At one point, Hedges provided a glimpse into what could have been, and the story turns brilliant--it goes to that exact deeper, sobering place it needs to go--but just as quickly he reverted to the superficial: having Gilbert simply complain about his mom and to the usual goofy portrayal of Arnie.

What’s Eating Gilbert Grape could have been really something if it had Gilbert and Bonnie just as they are, but with a honed mother-and-son focus or if it had Gilbert and Arnie just as they are, but with the honed focus on him and his brother. Or, if Hedges wanted to be ambitious, it could have all three, fully developed.

Hedges may have failed with Arnie and Bonnie, but some of his other characters are stronger and have their place. These are Gilbert’s older sister Amy as the caretaker and provider, his vain teenage sister Ellen, his always-cheerful boss, and his best friend. They make the book worth reading. The romantic interest, Becky, however, is a notable exception.

His relationship with Becky is one of the things eating Gilbert, yet it’s not for the reason it should be: the fact that he’s a 24-year-old man fantasizing about and romancing a 15-year-old girl. Becky is a sage who speaks so maturely that I thought she was an adult before Hedges revealed that she’s just a teen. This may have been purposeful on Hedges’s part, to distract from the reality. But since this side plot isn't about Gilbert’s grappling with his conscience, Hedges could have made Becky Gilbert’s age without hurting anything in this section. Her many wise statements--which sound ridiculous coming from a 15-year-old--would also then square with her age.

I did really enjoy this book for most of the characters. I was invested in learning about these small-town residents and about Endora. I didn’t get the latter wish, but I got enough of the former to keep me reading.

Most of all, I was curious about what was eating Gilbert Grape--but I’m still not sure about this. Too much in this story is scattered, some is a rough sketch, and some is entirely irrelevant. As a result, What’s Eating Gilbert Grape is more of a light read, and that’s a shame, because I doubt that’s what Peter Hedges intended.
Profile Image for Kandice.
1,641 reviews354 followers
May 6, 2021
Gilbert Grape lives at home with two of his three sisters, Amy and Ellen, and one of his two brothers, Arnie. Arnie is mentally handicapped and depends on Gilbert a lot. So do his sisters, but Arnie's dependence is draining. Then there's Gilbert's momma. She also lives with them and is poifectly huge. Like hundreds of pounds worth of huge. She was once the prettiest girl in Endora where the Grape family home is located, but now...is not. The whole Grape clan is just counting the days to Arnie's 18th birthday. The birthday the doctors said he would never see.

Poor Gilbert works so hard to keep his family afloat. He's 24 and simply cannot live his own life. His family needs him, his mental support, and, yes, his paycheck, to survive. Gilbert's dad, Mr. Grape, has been dead for 17 years, and with his older brother gone everything falls on Gilbert's shoulders. There's never any time for Gilbert. A few stolen moments here or there, but even they are tinged in guilt and regret.

This book was lovely. Not because it was sweet, or because I loved Gilbert, he could be quite the shit, but I defy anyone to live under the circumstances and burdens Gilbert endured every day and not be one at least occasionally. It was lovely because it was realistic. There is no Mother Theresa among us today. There are just people doing what they can to get by. Doing what has to be done to get their family and loved ones one day closer to happiness. Yes, Gilbert lost patience with Arnie and his sisters on occasion, but he still stayed and cared for his family in the best way he knew how. In a very sad, but real way.

The Grape clan was a bunch of characters, to say the least, and Gilbert's friends and fellow citizens were every bit as quirky, but anyone who has ever lived in a small town knows this is the way people really are. It's the normal people who get out. It's the regular people who leave town to find their dreams and futures. It's as if the real characters are a little larger than the Regular Joes so are caught in the sieve of small-town life. Too big to fall through the screen, but small enough to feel the pinch.

This book touches on the loss of small-town life with the Mom n Pop establishments. The encroachment of Wal-Marts and Krogers on sweet ol' Main Street USA. It shows us that not only the old codgers mourn the loss, but some of the younger generation as well. Gilbert's romance with the new to town Becky is just one more example of the uniqueness of small-town folk. Becky belonged in Endora in the same way Gilbert belongs and for some of the same reasons that Gilbert's older siblings who have left town do not. Small town life takes a certain fortitude and strength. Gilbert has it. Becky may as well. The Grape kids who have left do not.
Profile Image for Caroline.
232 reviews184 followers
August 2, 2021
It’s extremely rare for me to reread a book but I’ve now read this 3 times and it’s still as wonderful as I remember. Now I’m older, I do find the age gap between Becky and Gilbert too much, especially considering how Gilbert treats her. I wish the author had made her a bit older. But a small criticism on an otherwise perfect novel. Loved it!
Profile Image for Amy Bruestle.
273 reviews203 followers
December 15, 2020
I remember watching this moving in like 9th grade English class.... and the teacher fast forwarded during a scene or two, lol. I came across an old reading list from when i was in high school filled with a bunch of classics, and I went back and read a few of them, this being one of them! I still think its a weird title though. Haha.
Profile Image for Sarah.
547 reviews12 followers
May 2, 2022
I felt honored to be allowed inside Gilbert's head, because he always says the opposite of what he's thinking, and doesn't let anybody in. His distance from everyone lets him look at them in a light untouched by positive regard or optimism. He shares with the reader the brutal truth of what he's thinking, which is often guiltily hysterical.

Even still, you know there's a heart somewhere in there by the way he looks after Arnie. It was one of the sweetest relationships I've ever seen, although he treated everybody else kind of like crap.

There's no use trying to escape your life, it won't make any of it better.

Loving people is the best thing you can do for yourself.
Profile Image for Erica.
1,431 reviews479 followers
October 6, 2014
You know what makes me hang my head in shame?
The fact that I didn't know this book was a book until earlier this year.
I am not even kidding. Yes, I am a librarian and have been for a really long time and still, I had no idea this was a book.
So much shame for me.
My ridiculous excuse that I just now made up to make myself feel better about my prior ignorance: This came out in 1991 and I had been in college for a year and was getting the hang of things and really buckling down to study and such. I didn't read for pleasure anymore and I think all fiction that came out between 1990-1995 that didn't go through the library was missed by me. That's my excuse.
Anyway, I now know this is a book and I have read it.

It makes the movie make a lot more sense. I liked the movie quite well (I did see that when it came out; I also just watched it the other night for the sake of comparison and if it said "Based on the book by Peter Hedges" in the beginning, I missed it both the first time and when I watched it again on Friday) but I like the book a lot better. It's much more nuanced, the relationships between everyone are deeper, more real, more painful. I could relate with Book Gilbert far better than I could with Movie Gilbert and now I don't think Juliette Lewis was such a good choice.
But whatever.
This was a solid story and the ending is much more powerful in text, at least it was for me.
Profile Image for Matt  .
405 reviews16 followers
March 5, 2011
From a passage in the book where Momma is talking to Gilbert about motherhood/creastion: "I see you and I know that I'm a god. Or a goddess. Godlike! And this house is my kingdom. Yes, Gilbert. This chair is my throne. And you, Gilbert, are my knight in shimmering armor."..."Shining, I think, Momma, is what you mean."..."No, I know what I mean. You don't shine, Gilbert. You shimmer. You hear?. You shimmer!"

My dictionary defines shimmer as a verb and as a noun: to shine with or reflect a soft, tremulous light; a soft tremulous light.

This novel shimmers with that soft, tremulous light. It is a subtle story, written in a subtle style. One is surprised to find what appear to be nondescript sentences that are actually keys to the book, great with meaning. The above discussion of "shimmer" is such an example. As is this, possibly my favorite sentence in the book, marking the moment of Gilbert's, for lack of a better word, awakening: "And as the remaining dirt on Arnie starts washing away, it begins."
I have wanted to read this book for years. And now I have. And it was worth the wait.
Profile Image for J.T. Holden.
Author 11 books23 followers
December 1, 2014
Hedges' masterful first novel should be studied and studied (and studied again) by anyone thinking of writing a book in the first-person/present-tense because it is a style that only lends itself properly to a particular voice, rhythm, and cadence. It should never be approached in the same manner as a novel written in the more common first-person/past-tense. That said, What's Eating Gilbert Grape is nothing short of a modern classic. I've read it over 30 times (on one particular occasion, I immediately turned to the first page after finishing the last and started reading again), and I know with complete certainty that I will read it many more times before my time is done.
Profile Image for Audrey ✨Book Lover✨.
33 reviews5 followers
July 30, 2023
"We should be embarrassed by our attempts at patriotism. My brother's costume is the exception. He looks like an American. In fact, he behaves like one. When he tried to pick up the first kid he knocked down, he smashed into several others, it snowballed, chaos ensued. My brother very much resembled America today in pretty much all things."

I really enjoyed this book because it's like nothing I've ever read before. It was unique and special. Just like the characters and the story.

Gilbert Grape lives in Endora, Iowa with his family: mother, two sisters, and one brother living with him. He works at the barely profitable Lamson Grocery, and everyone shops at Food Land. His dad killed himself seventeen years prior, and his mother has been eating huge amounts every day since. She hasn't left the house in years. His sixteen-year-old sister is becoming insufferable, and his older sister is about to crack under the pressure of taking care of the family. His little brother is turning eighteen, a great feat in this family, a cause for celebration.

A new girl comes into town and entrances Gilbert, and it's all of this is just too much for him. He wants to leave: this boring town, this horrid family, but he just can't leave them all alone. He doesn't know what to do.

All of the characters that Peter Hedges creates are uncommon and different from everyone else. These people seem so real, so lifelike, even though nobody is brave enough to say what they are really thinking or acting how they really feel. I loved all the people, even the less-than-likely ones.

The writing was simple and clear. It was told through the point of view of Gilbert, and it was nice to be inside his head and see what he was thinking. It made me feel like I was close with Gilbert, actually talking to him.

The story was unforgettable.

In the end, Gilbert may not have been a spectacular person, but he was doing the best he could. His family was far from perfect, but they were just trying to do their best and make it through the day. Life is like that sometimes and I'm thankful that this book taught me that.
Profile Image for Vanessa.
708 reviews104 followers
July 27, 2018
I have this friend who has a rule (although he will deny that it's a rule) that he won't see movies if he has read the book-and vice versa-because it's a waste of time when there are so many movies to be seen and books to be read. And sometimes that is true but I am pretty much the opposite. If I liked the book, I'm curious to see how they adapt it for the screen. If I liked the movie or at least found it interesting, I want to go back to read the book to fill in the inevitable blanks. House of Sand and Fog, for example, was a great adaptation of the book but ended when there was still half the book to go. Ditto for Cavedweller.

Then you've got a book like this, which takes the same characters (Gilbert Grape and his dysfunctional family remnants) and setting (a dying small town in rural Iowa) but has a totally different mood from the film. Which is interesting since Hedges wrote both the book and the screenplay. As cliche as it is to drag out Salinger's ghost, Gilbert Grape, age 24, has a distinct Holden Caulfield-ish aura about him. Call him "Catcher in the Soybeans." He works stocking shelves at a local grocery that is barely surviving since a chain store opened nearby. He and his older sister care for their teenage sister, his mentally challenged brother and their mother who has pretty much been eating her grief since their father hung himself almost 20 years ago in their basement. She has become so large that she is virtually immobile, hasn't left the house in years, and the floor beneath her chair is now starting to cave in. It sounds unbearably maudlin perhaps at this point. Thanks to the misanthropic yet likable narrator, it's not.

I don't know how to describe this book. Parts were sad, parts were very funny. I didn't totally click with it for some reason. Perhaps it's because I'm a heathen who never totally appreciated Salinger? But I can understand how other people can love it.

The movie, on the other hand, is one of my all-time favorites.
Profile Image for Karolina Kat.
325 reviews53 followers
July 15, 2016
You don’t shine, Gilbert. You shimmer. You hear? You shimmer!

Like many before me, for a long time I had no idea that there was a book upon which one of the most important movies of my adolescent years was based.
The story of the Grape family in the novel is more realistic, while all the characters are simply more human. There aren't that many good people in the little town of Endora, and Gilbert falls rightin between the white and the black.

[...]there’s nothing worse than being told you’re good when you know you’re bad.

Gilbert from the novel is more overwhelmed with life, his perception of people surrounding him sharper, and having him as the narrator/focalizer makes for a very drastic point of view.
Surprisingly it is the book, not movie, that brings the flesh and bone to Gilbert's struggles and to people around him, who do not serve as background characters but simply feel as other real people living in Endora.

Arnie's illness is far less pretty, Amy's struggles are far harder, and his mother is more disturbed than in the movie. And there is far more that's eating Gilbert Grape.
Profile Image for Addie Bowlin.
136 reviews176 followers
February 10, 2009
One of my very favorite books. I'd seen (and loved) the movie version before picking up this book, but it was the style of writing that made it jump out to me and establish itself as separate. Gilbert's inner monologue? Brilliant and hilarious, I could go on and on. It felt so REAL to me. Mr. Hedges is very talented. Through the prose I was enveloped in the sleepy town vibe so completely that I felt as if Endora were my own hometown, familiar in every way. I continue to recommend this book to anyone searching for a good read, and no one has been disappointed so far.
Profile Image for Alexis.
Author 7 books144 followers
August 16, 2014
This was my favourite book when I was a teenager. I loved it when I was in high school, had parts of it memorized and read it multiple times. I was nervous and scared to read it. But you know what, I LOVED it. It's extremely well written and the voice is strong. It is funny and sad and influential. It has shaped the way I write . I still love this book. I noticed that the author has a contact form on his website. I intend to write him a note.
Profile Image for Mad Dog.
86 reviews13 followers
March 9, 2011
This book is not really informative, deep, or insightful. I am talking about the first person narrator (Gilbert) as well as the book. Gilbert is thoroughly mediocre in thought and deed. He wears a 'perma-frown'. He likes to brood. The book relies on his thoughts more than his actions, as he is very passive(repressed). Most of the supporting characters are annoyingly shallow.

None of this really sounds like a good book to me.

But this book (and Gilbert) did very much captivate me. I am rooting hard for Gilbert, a guy that I would probably dislike in 'real life'. What propels me through this book is affection and hope. Gilbert is affecting because he simply recognizes what is good and true. He is sensitve to what is good and true. Gilbert is affecting because he is sad and I want him to be happy. I want him to be able to 'live out' what is 'good and true'. But he is not graceful when confronted with the foolishness of others. And he doesn't say enough (or do enough) when confronted with the 'good and true' that he desires. He broods about events in the past and 'things' that are out of his control. So there are multiple obstacles. This is the suspense of the book.

Go Gilbert!!

One brain teaser for me (about this book) is this: What would this book be like if Gilbert is not handsome? Gilbert has a certain aura that draws people to him. The community (in this book) seems to have a rooting interest in Gilbert. This probably would be removed if Gilbert is not handsome, and the book would be much different.
Profile Image for Asghar Abbas.
Author 5 books201 followers
May 17, 2016

Thought I was different and it seems I'm just the same
As a game I put my hand over the flame
I thought, I was smarter as I flew into the sun
But it turned out the way it does with everyone

Oh, oh, I don't fly around your fire anymore
I don't fly around your fire anymore
Burned and fallen down so many times before
I don't fly around your fire anymore

I love the heat, I love the things that I forgot
I love the strings that tie me down and cut me off
I was a king, I was a moth with painted wings made of cloth
When did the flame burn so high and get so hot?

Oh, oh, I don't fly around your fire anymore
I don't fly around your fire anymore
Burned and fallen down so many times before
I don't fly around, fly around

Fly around

I don't fly around your fire anymore
I don't fly around your fire anymore
Burned and fallen down so many times before
I don't fly around, fly around

I don't fly around your fire anymore
I don't fly around your fire anymore
Burned and fallen down so many times before
I don't fly around, fly around

Oh, fly around, oh

-------------------------

This is a Song from Audioslave by Chris Cornell. This is how much I love this book, its movie, and Johnny Depp.

Profile Image for Jaime Navarro.
31 reviews5 followers
March 3, 2010
I loved this book! The story is simple but engaging and the character of Gilbert Grape is one of the most well constructed male characters I’ve read in a long time. I enjoyed it so much because it’s not quite a coming of age story; Gilbert is older and feels the adult pressures of being a grown up but he’s still young enough that his life has not passed him by, even though he thinks it has, and all these other characters in the book are trying to show him this.
Coming from a “unique” family myself, this story endures itself to me as much for the good of it’s characters but also their flaws. My only regret is that I wish I had read this book sooner!
Excellent writing, excellent characters and an amazing story…what else can you ask for in a book?
Profile Image for Karin.
1,669 reviews22 followers
April 21, 2020
This book was written fairly well, which is why it's two stars and not one.

This book does have humour in it, but it's not a happy book. Gilbert Grape is part of a highly dysfunctional family still suffering in their own ways since his dad was found in the basement after hanging himself, and in addition, his younger brother Arnie has special needs. They are dysfunctional because none of them has had any sort of help in handling their feelings and issues since then.

If you like really psychological, darkly funny novels about families in crisis, then you may well like this book. There is a redeeming feature to this book--a very redeeming feature, but that goes beyond the kinds of things I include in my review.
Profile Image for Jasie.
55 reviews4 followers
August 28, 2018
Let me just say that yes, the movie was good (great! phenomenal even!), but the book is definitely better. Gilbert Grape has some very sardonic and hilarious thoughts that you can only experience if you read the book. I had no idea Gilbert's character felt the way he did. So many things were left out of the movie. I really fell in love with everyone. The amount of compassion you feel for these people in this small Iowa town is astounding.
Profile Image for Angie Maxwell.
54 reviews
February 16, 2022
If you like the movie, you’ll love the book. The book is always better right? It was a bit harsh to see the “R” word used so often. And you may want to check trigger warnings. Some of the things that happen in this book just didn’t sit right with me. I’m glad they left those parts out of the movie.
Profile Image for Ashleigh.
25 reviews1 follower
May 16, 2022
Gilbert is kind of an asshole throughout but you know what? You'd be too if you had to go through half of what he does in this book. Really enjoyed but- and this is blasphemy- I think the film was better.
Profile Image for Cathleen.
49 reviews10 followers
June 6, 2020
The app just ate my long review of this book, so let’s just say it was okay. The Goodreads app gets one fucking star.
Profile Image for Kelly Kosinski.
530 reviews176 followers
January 28, 2024
Yes, this book definitely deserves 5 stars! I loved the movie but the book has so much more detail and I really enjoyed it. Gilbert is one of five siblings. Two siblings are the breadwinners and do not live at home, they have busy lives elsewhere and send checks back home. This is needed because when Gilbert was just seven years old, his father, full of smiles that morning, hung himself in the basement, leaving his wife and children forever. The mother eats constantly from her despair and anger, becoming the size of a house. She becomes so large, the floor is buckling and has to have support beams put in the basement. They do this discreetly so as to not embarrass the mother who only leaves her chain for visits to the bathroom.

When the book opens, you will meet Gilbert’s younger brother, the retard as Gilbert calls him. Despite this unkind name, Gilbert does love him and he cares for his mentally challenged brother, Arnie, who will soon celebrate his 18th birthday.

Arnie is a happy child and loves his older brother but doesn’t understand why he cannot do everything he wishes such as climbing the water tower which drives the police to despair. Gilbert constantly has to call him down and gets lectured by the police in town.

Also, Arnie has a love for the carnival that comes to town every year. He and Gilbert watch from the side of the road every year. Arnie’s greatest love is the horses from the merry-go-round and when the carnival opens, Gilbert takes him there and allows him to ride a certain horse many times.

Gilbert works at the small grocery store and feels his life going nowhere. He feels stuck in this small town and shares his frustration through his surly manner towards family and friends.

Happily for him, a beautiful young girl comes to town and Gilbert is enthralled by her. She changes his life for the better with her charm and care that she displays for all, including young Arnie.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ginger Bensman.
Author 2 books60 followers
January 14, 2019
Gilbert (smart, handsome, horny, and twenty-four) is stuck in small town rural America and going nowhere. The operative word here is “stuck”. He is tethered (duty bound) to a despondent and tragically widowed mother (Bonnie Grape) who is morbidly obese, eats junk food by the pallet, and smokes up a storm while she watches television in her upstairs room where the floor beneath her bulges perilously. Bonnie’s one desperate wish is to see Gilbert’s younger, developmentally delayed brother, Arnie (who wasn’t supposed to survive much past infancy), turn 18. And so we embark on Arnie’s big year. Gilbert, his sisters (Amy, Ellen and Janice) and his older brother, Larry, have (each in their own way) been primed and are struggling toward Arnie’s special day. Walk a mile, or two, or three, in Gilbert’s shoes. The trek is sad, snarky, darkly funny and largely engaging (if overlong at times to the point of being a bit tedious).
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