Describe Epithetical Books The Elementary Particles
Title | : | The Elementary Particles |
Author | : | Michel Houellebecq |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 272 pages |
Published | : | November 13th 2001 by Vintage (first published August 24th 1998) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Cultural. France. Literature. European Literature. French Literature. Novels |
Michel Houellebecq
Paperback | Pages: 272 pages Rating: 3.8 | 29086 Users | 1764 Reviews
Rendition During Books The Elementary Particles
Brilliant, caustic, comic, and severe, The Elementary Particles is an unflinching look at a modern world plagued by consumerism, materialism, and unchecked scientific experimentation. An international bestseller and controversial literary phenomenon that drew immediate comparison to the novels of Beckett, Huxley, and Camus, this is the story of two half-brothers abandoned by a mother who gave herself fully to the drugged-out free-love world of the sixties. Bruno, overweight and a failure at everything, is himself a raucously promiscuous hedonist, while Michel, his younger brother, is an emotionally dead molecular biologist wholly immersed in the solitude of his work. Each is ultimately offered a final chance at genuine love, and what unfolds is an endlessly unpredictable and provocative tale that speaks to the impossible redemption of the human condition.Point Books Conducive To The Elementary Particles
Original Title: | Les Particules élémentaires |
ISBN: | 0375727019 (ISBN13: 9780375727016) |
Edition Language: | English |
Characters: | Bruno Clément, Michel Djerzinski, Janine Ceccaldi, Christiane, Annabelle |
Setting: | Paris(France) Galway(Ireland) |
Literary Awards: | International Dublin Literary Award (2002) |
Rating Epithetical Books The Elementary Particles
Ratings: 3.8 From 29086 Users | 1764 ReviewsColumn Epithetical Books The Elementary Particles
This book is a stunning surprise to me as I was properly prepared to dislike it before I picked it up. Although I was determined to finish the book, I was not prepared for what a wonderful book this is. This book is a consummate sociological description and commentary of the second half of the twentieth century's social revolution in western culture. The psychology isn't too bad either.Because it is a work of fiction, I interpret it as a grand sociological critique, with some fictional leeway,Both oddly engrossing and somehow also barely readable, Elementary Particles, like all of Houllebecq's narcissistic novels, focuses its aim on men solely obsessed with getting their aged and increasingly flaccid penises erect long enough to fulfill the characters' unending pedophiliac whims. This one is worse than The Possibility of an Island, which at least gave readers a few sci-fi reasons for the dystopian world. In the end, nearly both books arrive at the same end: humanity is doomed, filled
DNF, terrible. Read half and have had enough.
You can interpret this book in several different ways. A lot of people view it as a depressing, hate-filled rant, filled with a really startling amount of unpleasant sex. I'm not saying that that's necessarily incorrect. In fact, my immediate association was with the fictitious books that Moreland invents in one of the Anthony Powell novels: "Seated One Day at my Organ", by the author of "One Hundred Disagreeable Sexual Experiences". But I think there are more interesting ways of reading Les
Damn! I've had this for years, only read it recently, wished I'd read it long ago. Totally brilliant. Purposefully vicious and perverted to make philosophical points about the unhappy state of humanity. Juxtaposition of many sagging labias and licked cocks (which sadly might turn idiots off) with mucho genetics-related philosophizing (which sadly might turn idiots off). A book about the achievement of utopia, sort of like Huxley's BNW and Island, which the book deals with. Another
Wow. What an incredible book. The Epilogue makes a huge difference in how one might view it on the whole. It certainly did for me. I was getting so depressed by the end that I almost chucked it aside around the 90% mark because I felt a panic attack coming on. But I took a deep breath and I switched up my reading soundtrack and I pushed on and am very glad that I did. The Epilogue really clarifies so much that precedes it. Leading up to that point it is basically 100% bleak, and I mean truly,
Extraordinary, outstanding, and absolutely not-to-be-missed*!* "The Elementary Particles" holds you captive like only the best of 'em can. Think-- a long, cold autumn afternoon sipping coffee and reading "Never Let Me Go." Think-- Dan Brown# poolside. All of these experiences that could conceivably last one blissful, insatiable sitting (the novels that are not considered novellas, that is)-- this is one of 'em. The artistry is like a painting, the reading is like some immersive exercise that
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