HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
Search Site
This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and (if not signed in) for advertising. By using LibraryThing you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your use of the site and services is subject to these policies and terms.

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Tim: A Novel by Colleen McCullough
Loading...

Tim: A Novel (original 1974; edition 1974)

by Colleen McCullough (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
6301437,073 (3.69)27
Tim, a novel by Colleen McCullough
Story of an older couple that have a mentally retarded son and the daughter they have a year later is perfectly normal.
They are able to keep the boy at home teaching him what they can. Many others make fun of him and take advantage of him. One day after his day laborer job with his father and others the woman nearby asks if he can mow her lawn and help with flowers and planting.
He comes every Saturday and she even asks the couple to take him to her beach house and they agree. She is able to show him love, as she never had it from the foster home she grew up in.
She is even able to teach him words and some math. Tim's mother passes away and he understands what happened to his mother when she died.
Other events occur and the professors think she should marry.
I received this book from National Library Service for my BARD (Braille Audio Reading Device). ( )
1 vote jbarr5 | Jan 7, 2016 |
Showing 11 of 11
A lovely book. The relationship between Mary and Tim is well done and believable. ( )
  Luziadovalongo | Jul 14, 2022 |
Successful in her career and having made a number of astute fiscal decisions that have landed her in financial comfort, Mary has reached her forties single but content. While some construction is being done on her neighbor's property, Mary observes one particular crew member whose beauty nearly takes her breath away. Though she learns that the young man, Tim, has a mental disability, Mary offers him additional work in her yard — partly to provide him and his family with extra income, but also (if she's being honest with herself) to keep him and his Adonis-like looks coming around regularly.

This book's flap description made me feel pretty uncomfortable, but I've enjoyed many of McCullough's other works so I gave it a chance. While I don't regret reading it, I don't feel that it's aged well. The plot has a rather cringey vibe to it, though the author delicately straddles the line between compassion and impropriety. Viewed in 2021 through a lens of greater sensitivity, much of the language, both medical and casual, are offensive. The abrupt and not necessarily hopeful ending left something to be desired. ( )
  ryner | Dec 29, 2021 |
An easy read and a lovely tale ( )
  karenshann | Dec 31, 2019 |
couldn't get past the 1st few pages ( )
  KimSalyers | Oct 1, 2016 |
Tim, a novel by Colleen McCullough
Story of an older couple that have a mentally retarded son and the daughter they have a year later is perfectly normal.
They are able to keep the boy at home teaching him what they can. Many others make fun of him and take advantage of him. One day after his day laborer job with his father and others the woman nearby asks if he can mow her lawn and help with flowers and planting.
He comes every Saturday and she even asks the couple to take him to her beach house and they agree. She is able to show him love, as she never had it from the foster home she grew up in.
She is even able to teach him words and some math. Tim's mother passes away and he understands what happened to his mother when she died.
Other events occur and the professors think she should marry.
I received this book from National Library Service for my BARD (Braille Audio Reading Device). ( )
1 vote jbarr5 | Jan 7, 2016 |
Much better than the movie and so well written. Though it is very easy to picture a young Mel Gibson in the role of Tim, this story had so much more to it. ( )
  gogglemiss | Nov 13, 2015 |
Wow... There is so much that I want to say about this book, and I don't know if I will really be able to do it all justice. I think I'm just going to go for my tried and true method and just ask you to tag along with my ramblings... Hopefully it will make sense at the end. :)

On the surface, "Tim" is a story of an unlikely relationship between a child-like 25 year old mentally retarded man, the title character, and a 43 year old straight-laced and emotionally distant spinster, Mary Horton. Naturally, their relationship is mutually beneficial, with each of them teaching the other how to live.

But the surface story, while absolutely moving and beautiful, is just the bottom layer of the cake. McCullough supplements that base with layer upon layer of detail and depth and insight and truth. While the finished product by another author may have been a tasty and even nice looking cake, in McCullough's expert hands it's something too amazing to actually mar by eating it. You want to keep this cake. You want to cherish it and remember every beautiful detail of it.

We're introduced to Tim, and from the beginning he's impossible not to love and want to protect. Tim's child-like innocence is what really broke my heart. He is tricked and fooled by his "friends", and is upset afterward, but not because he was tricked. His is not a knee-jerk reaction to being laughed at that causes him distress, it is the fact that he knows that he is not able to understand WHY he is being laughed at that distresses him. He seeks acceptance and understanding and love just like we all do.

All of us, that is, except Mary Horton. From the age of 14, she struggled and worked hard on her own to make a life for herself. Unfortunately, due to having a very hard childhood, her idea of "life" is one devoid of any personal relationships. She's never had a boyfriend, never wanted one, doesn't have any personal friends, and her only pleasures are solitary ones, her successes are material ones.

After a chance meeting with Tim, who fascinates her simply because of his sheer attractiveness, they each begin to fill a hole in the other person's life that neither knew they had. This isn't recognized until much later, but it warmed my heart to see them teaching each other what life is really about.

McCullough's descriptions of emotion and perception of the world is amazing. I'm not sure I've ever read anything like it. Her way with words is brilliant. It's like she's imparting secrets that you already knew, but just couldn't understand because the words are just words without MEANING. Even sitting here writing this, I'm at a loss to describe just what it is that touched me so deeply, but I'm close to tears just thinking about the way that she makes simple concepts turn into life-altering truths.

But more than that, she made me think of things in a way that I would never have thought of before. For instance, at one point when Tim is sleeping, Mary ponders what his dreams are like: Did he venture forth as limited in his nocturnal wanderings as he was during his waking life, or did the miracle happen which freed him from all his chains?

I had to stop and think about this. On the one hand, dreaming that you are not fettered by a mental handicap would lend the dreams a wonderful freedom, but on the other, I would imagine that waking up to realize that that freedom was only an illusion would be torture day after day. So, I hope that is not the case.

Another thing that I really enjoyed about McCullough's writing was its vividness. Her characters are just ALIVE and jump off the page. Their local slang and way of speaking had me laughing even while I had tears in my eyes, because while the phrases they use are hilarious, what they are actually saying is true in any language.

The characters are memorable, and none of them, not one, pulls any punches. I love that they say what they mean, and mean what they say. Brutally honest, perhaps, but if what needs to be said is important enough, sometimes it takes a brutal delivery to make it sink in.

I also loved the little snippets of Australian life and culture we get to see. I love reading about other cultures and people, and the only thing that I wish was extended was the small section dealing with the Australian bush. I wanted to see the people and find out how Mary would interact with them.

Anyway. I loved this book. I'm immensely glad that I read it, and can safely say that I will soon be reading much, much more of McCullough's writing. ( )
  TheBecks | Apr 1, 2013 |
I loved the writing in this book. This is my first McCullough book and I just know I will be reading more of her. This book is about the beautiful but mentally challenged Tim who meets the lonely spinster Mary Horton. Although they’re an unlikely pair, from their very first meeting they have a beautiful connection together. I did not think that the relationship would exactly work but with they fit together perfectly. There was an innocence and vulnerability about their interaction that really touched me. ( )
  Jaguar897 | Mar 31, 2013 |
This is a beautiful story of unconditional love.

Tim is an incredibly attractive 25 year old man with the mind of a child. From the very first pages the author makes you fall in love with Tim because of his warm heart and simply outspoken personality. Mary Horton is a woman in her 40ies, living a secluded life and spending most of her time at work. Every day is the same for her until the day she meets Tim. He lightens her up and changes her life completely. It’s exciting to follow how the relationship develops between them, from a simple friendship and Mary’s wish to help him into true love. They are so different that many people (even Tim’s sister) disapprove and are unable to understand their love. Even the author says: They are the world’s most unique couple.
There are so many beautiful romantic love stories written, but this one is very special and deserves to be read. ( )
2 vote liibooks | Aug 25, 2010 |
2898 Tim a novel by Colleen McCullough (read 18 Aug 1996) This tells of Tim Melville, a 25-year-old handsome retarded man in Australia, and Mary, a 43 (or so) year-old spinster. It is a touching and moving story, but really seems like a "woman's book". It is what I would expect to find in a woman's magazine. The story was somewhat sugar-coated and un-true-to-life--hard to believe a woman would fall in love with a man as dim as Tim. But while I was reading I enjoyed it. ( )
  Schmerguls | Jan 28, 2008 |
NIL
  rustyoldboat | May 28, 2011 |
Showing 11 of 11

Current Discussions

None

Popular covers

Quick Links

Rating

Average: (3.69)
0.5
1 1
1.5 1
2 7
2.5 7
3 36
3.5 6
4 61
4.5 5
5 21

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

About | Contact | Privacy/Terms | Help/FAQs | Blog | Store | APIs | TinyCat | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | Common Knowledge | 204,522,083 books! | Top bar: Always visible