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Carregando... The Complete Enderby: Inside Mr. Enderby; Enderby Outside; The Clockwork Testament; Enderby's Dark Ladyde Anthony Burgess
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. Inside Mr. Enderby 4 stars - I thought this was a wonder when I read it in 1997. Burgess is for word lovers. One of the things that makes him funny is his insertion of the perfect overwrought word at the right moment. His gift very much reminds me of Martin Amis's work, though they are strikingly dissimilar in other ways. Enderby Outside 3 stars - Reading this in 2013, I was disappointed. I lost interest in the narrative toward the middle. And the last scene where Enderby meets his muse I did not like at all. Though technically, there was no falling off of technique. In other words, it doesn't get sloppy, I simply lost interest in it. The reason for this was the discourse on poetry, which hasn't aged well. I have yet to read the last two novels here: Clockwork Testament and Enderby's Dark Lady. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
Pertence à sérieEnderby (1-4)
Enderby is a poet, social critic and Catholic. He may be found hiding in the lavatory where much of his best work is composed, or perhaps in Rome, brainwashed into respectability by a glamorous wife, aftershave and the dolce vita. Whether he is pursuing revenge and inspiration in Morocco, expounding on his notorious sex film on a TV chat show, or writing a hit musical based on the life and work of Shakespeare, Enderby emerges triumphant. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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The last two novels are a different matter. They don't hang together, either with each other or with the first two. The Clockwork Testament is the worst novel of the four, in terms of art (less well written, less unified) and morality (most contemporary readers will judge at least Enderby and possibly also Burgess to be racist) but also the most interesting in terms of literary history and philosophy: it is, quite obviously, a response to the American reception of A Clockwork Orange/i>. This is perfectly reasonable in purely intellectual terms. The novel was butchered by the film version, and Burgess was made to appear someone he really isn't (i.e., the film is a celebration of the individual freedoms so beloved by seventies radicals; the book is actually a rejection of the juvenile antics that bear some resemblance to the antics of seventies radicals); here, Enderby spends much time thinking about Dostoevskian themes of individual freedom, determinism, and predestination, in a fairly responsible manner, i.e., in exactly the manner that the film of ACO, and the aforementioned radicals, refused.
Unfortunately, Burgess lets the radicals themselves into the book, and promptly becomes the kind of reductionist that he claims those radicals were. Racism is mostly in your head, and so is sexism, etc... No, they're not.
The final novel, Enderby's Dark Lady, could almost be an apology for writing the Testament. The 'dark lady' of Shakespeare becomes a wonderful black American woman, who is far more intelligent, beautiful, sensible, and personable than Enderby... and also clearly a victim of blatant sexism and racism, which is not, as it was in the Testament, excused. It's also a very funny piece of anti-Americanism, if you like that kind of thing. And let's be honest, you got to the end of a review of a series of Anthony Burgess novels, so you probably do.
Unfortunately, the last chapter of this last Enderby novel is very, very silly. ( )