2 posts tagged “books”
"Spin spin whisky and gin, I suffer for my art Bartender"
This is just a good, old fashioned horror story. Diary by Chuck Palahniuk is an excellent read and athough he borrows an obvious device from Ira Levin's Rosemary's Baby, it is none the worse for it.
OK, you can see it as a post-modern novel highlighting the unstoppable rise of capitalism and, on a small scale, what a group of people choose to do about it. But on the other hand, you've got old folks saying "We don't want yooze folk round 'ere no mowa" whilst the rest of them stand around sagely saying nothing whilst plotting doom and destruction. An old cemetary, dark woods, crazed loons running around the place plus the fires of Hell - this is a classic 70's horror film in a book.
Seriously, I like the way our opinion of Peter is made to change throughout the book and I particularly liked the references to the psycology of art, the psychosomatic illness Stendhal's syndrome and tying these in with Plato and Jung's views on the subject.
I loved it and I can't wait until David Fincher turns this one into a film too. A keeper!
I have put this entry up to encourage people to comment on what they thought about the book.
Sadly, I think that the majority of people felt this was a Jumble Sale one rather that a Keeper.
I am in the Keeper camp and I felt that this book was excellent, probably coming second out of the whole list (below right) so far.
If you subscribe to the view that this book is only 40 years away, say, in the future then this is a very scary book indeed. We are all surely aware of what the future holds if we carry on the way we do. This book sets it out in black and white for us and yet we will doubtless still elect to carry on in the way we do. As Crake points out, if Mankind were wiped out save for a few here and there, we could never populate the earth again. We have used up ever resource getting here in the first place; there's not enough left for us to do it all again no matter how long it takes.
On a different level, someone pointed out that you can see Crake as God, Oryx as Nature and Snowman as Humankind. Two guardians sitting on Snowman's shoulder as he made his way through life, living, soiling and spoiling as a human being.
The books contains plenty of action and suspense with some wicked genetically created animals, Wolvogs and Pigoons. Atwood is also very clever in running different time-lines through the book and keeping the pace up by switching between the stories.
A keeper for me.