Ebook {Epub PDF} The Possibility of an Island by Michel Houellebecq
If you liked Atomisedand Platform, you'll love The Possibility of an Island. Houellebecq is perhaps the most talented of current French writers, and might be termed the Lord of the New Despair, but he has yet to write his masterpiece. He can do whatever he wants; a happy, but dangerous state for a writer."Author: Michel Houellebecq. · Overview. A worldwide phenomenon and the most important French novelist since Camus, Michel Houellebecq now delivers his magnum opus–a tale of our present circumstances told from the future, when humanity as we know it has vanished. Surprisingly poignant, philosophically compelling, and occasionally laugh-out-loud funny, The Possibility of an Island is at once an indictment, an elegy, Brand: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. · Michel Houellebecq continues to say the unsayable in The Possibility of an Island, but to what end, asks Tim Adams. They have become a type. Estimated Reading Time: 7 mins.
In many respects, The Possibility of an Island picks up where an earlier Houellebecq novel, Les Particules élémentaires (; The Elementary Particles, also known as Atomised, ), leaves off. Buy a cheap copy of The Possibility of an Island book by Michel Houellebecq. A worldwide phenomenon and the most famous French novelist since Camus, Michel Houellebecq now delivers his magnum opus—a tale of our present circumstances told Free shipping over $ In "The Possibility of an Island," the coolness of Houellebecq the satirist repeatedly runs up against the heat of Houellebecq the priapic bad boy, making for some pretty strange weather.
Overview. A worldwide phenomenon and the most important French novelist since Camus, Michel Houellebecq now delivers his magnum opus–a tale of our present circumstances told from the future, when humanity as we know it has vanished. Surprisingly poignant, philosophically compelling, and occasionally laugh-out-loud funny, The Possibility of an Island is at once an indictment, an elegy, and a celebration of everything we have and are at risk of losing. In "The Possibility of an Island," the coolness of Houellebecq the satirist repeatedly runs up against the heat of Houellebecq the priapic bad boy, making for some pretty strange weather. Houellebecq is another writer in the grand French school of misanthropy, in the shadow of its master, Céline, but making every effort to cast his own. The Possibility of an Island is, I think, his best work to-date: bleak, brutal, funny, revolting, tender and, in the end, ineffably sad. The world of Houellebecq is one of cratered streets, perpetually in the dark because its inhabitants continually and maliciously put of the street lights to impair the ability of others to proceed safely.
0コメント