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Loading... Samedi the Deafness (Vintage Contemporaries)por Jesse Ball
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adorará Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se gostará deste livro. David Eicke: I’m at a bit of a loss as to what to say about Samedi the Deafness. I can say that Jesse Ball wrote it. I can say that it’s a book. But I feel that if I attempted to plot-summarize, my blurb would end up running down and covering up someone else’s cartoon, and no one likes it when that happens. I also can’t very well compare it to another book, or even two or three other books. All this Kafka-meets-Cussler-meets-Danielewski business tends to not make any sense. I found it in the Original Voices section when I visited Borders. They certainly got that right. Not only did this book make me think, but also kept me so engaged that I read it faster than any novel since Angels & Demons four years ago. One can tell that Ball began writing as a poet. His words have a rarely achieved economy to them, and he’s managed to write the most beautiful love-scene I’ve ever come across. (And I’ve “come across” Toni Morrison.) This is a must for anyone looking for an original. Something is about to happen according to the notes left pinned to suicide victims outside the White House. When protagonist James Sim witnesses the death of a man who tells him cryptic details connected to the terrible events that are to occur in 7 days, Sim is drawn in. The book reads like poetry. It's beautiful and thought provoking from the flashbacks to James Sim's childhood hallucinations to the hospital for liars to the mad scheme behind the pending catastrophe. Interesting story told in a "modern" style. The flashbacks were fun but pointless to the story ultimately. The ending left alot to be desired, as Ball does not give an indication as to which of 2 endings is real and which is a lie. Graham Greene’s feel for a plot twist—stuck in a superglued handshake with Gogol’s dark wit. —Helen Oyeyemi sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
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(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:52 -0400)
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One morning in the park James Sim discovers a man, crumpled on the ground, stabbed in the chest. With his last breath, the man whispers one word: Samedi. What follows is a spellbinding game of cat and mouse as James is abducted, brought to an asylum, and seduced by a woman in yellow. Who is lying? What is Samedi? And what will happen on the seventh day?
Sure, throw out the word "spellbinding" as flowery publishing-speak, but the rest of it sounds intriguing. And it was, as far as stories go. It kept me in suspense throughout with the oddity of the characters and setting. Not a bad job, for a first time fiction author. (Jesse Bell apparently has some published poetry under his belt, but I rarely grace that section of the Barnes & Noble.)
I'll give him high marks for style and story, but I found myself not caring at all about any of the characters. I think he was aiming for a post-modern thriller in the vein of Paul Auster's City of Glass, where what is happening is so much more important than who it is happening to, but I don't think anyone will be making a graphic novel of this one. (Was I clear enough? I meant to say, he fell short of his mark.) I'd categorize this with The Raw Shark Texts: a nice try.
A final thought: I'm interested in books that break from the standard layout and format. This one doesn't use indented paragraphs, opting instead for the spaced paragraphs of so many web pages these days (this one for example). And it uses a dash to predicate dialogue instead of quotation marks. Oddly enough, I've found that distracting in the past, but it seemed to work well here.
Invisible Lizard's Unusual Oranges (