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Paperback The Possibility of an Island Book

ISBN: 0307275213

ISBN13: 9780307275219

The Possibility of an Island

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Book 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... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

if you want the truth youll get it

Its not optimistic, or happy book. But its showing what its like to be a human. And we all know that's not an easy task. Some would say the book is about sax and sex only, but I strongly disagree. Author is showing all aspects of the life using sex as a tool, a weapon. Through it he shows love, desperation, fears. If you wanna see that you're not alone in your dark thoughts you should read this book. It helps in its strange, awkward ways

Insightful, entertaining, thought provoking

This like Atomised is a touch misoginistic at times, however it gives a deep insight into the male psyche. It is witty, caustic and one of the better books i have read.

A Canticle for Don Quixote

A profoundly sad and lyrical book, perhaps the author's masterpiece, in which the Spanish countryside of the mad knight, now modern, disillusioned, and no longer blind, is intertwined with the Spanish countryside of a future millennium that is bleak and all too plausible. If Walter Miller's apocalyptic classic touched us with its ironic depiction of a post-nuclear devastation planet that cycles and recycles its history, Houellebecq shows us the inevitably destructive trajectory of man from within, what has replaced the paradise that was long ago lost, and the animal nature of humans that centuries of culture have camouflaged but cannot eliminate. This book will linger in the reader's memory for a long, long time. Very few contemporary authors have captured the essence of our loneliness as precisely as this one.

Great reflection on what it means to be human and the role of aging

This was my first Houellebecq novel, and I absolutely loved it. In fact, this is one of my all time favorites. The book addresses issues that are currently relevant in the Western world (and the book is set mostly in France and Spain), and the book often directly refers to things that were recently in the news and refers to current technology. The book reflects on what it means to be human by comparing humans (mortals with all sorts of desires) with neo-humans (immortals, with very few desires). Houellebeck addresses the processes of aging, love and sex, and how these are related. In that sense, the book is very philosophical. And yet, it was also extremely well written and very readable. I loved the story line and the plot, and I had a very hard time putting it down. Finally, I also liked the humor in the book. I 'd like to compare Houellebecq with Vonnegut, in that both authors are very philosophical, both authors use science fiction as a tool to have a different perspective on current conditions (rather than imagining what the future might look like), and both have a great sense of humor.

Grim and very embittered, but still utterly brilliant.

This is undoubtedly Houellebecq's most ambitous work to date. The themes of his previous novels, such as the fragmentation of modern society, the masochistic cult of youthful sexuality in an aging society, and the possibility of happiness in a world in which values have been stripped to those of hedonistic individualism at the same time that the satisfaction of those desires has never been harder to obtain, are again explored, but here in a quite novel setting, and to a more thorough conclusion. The novel is composed of two parallel narratives, both concerning the character of Daniel, a politically incorrect comedian who has made a carreer out of exploiting the cruelty and prejudices of the masses. The first narrative is of the life of the original human Daniel, the second concerns that of his cloned successors. The two narratives have a kind of symmetry. Whereas the human Daniel gradually loses his faith in humanity, the power of love, and his ability to obtain any kind of love, sexual or otherwise, the cloned versions of Daniel gradually emerge from a completely isolated, pain free environment, to awaken to the desire and possibility of human social and sexual contact. The isolated world of Daniel's cloned existance seems to portray Houellebecq's vision of the logical conclusion to developments in contemporary society. Each clone lives in a secluded bubble of existance, designed to shield him from the pain and suffering that has been declared to be an inherent component of human biological life. Contact with others is made purely by e-mail, whilst outside in the real world, human society has degenerated into the level of animal savagery. The world of the cloned neo-humans is run by the 'Supreme Sister', in other words feminists have fully succeeded in their present agenda of castrating men and divorcing reproduction entirely from sex. In fact, the whole story of the cult from which the neo-humans and Daniel's immortal successors emerge could be read as an allegory of the development of human civilisation out of a primitive society dependent on basic biological needs (something which Houellebecq seems to see as being a state our present society has regressed to), to its transition to a patriarchal society based on moral aspirations, and then to one were the seemingly innate simian sexual rivalry of men is ultimately exploited by women to castrate them and take control of sexual reproduction. For Houellebecq, human life is a sexual battle. Darwinism should be better described as 'survival of the sexiest', rather than 'survival of the fittest'. He has the honesty and the politically incorrect aptitude to recognise that all our social mores, all our moral codes, ultimately spring from the eternal Darwinian sexual battle to leave as many descendents as possible behind us. 'Contrary to recieved ideas, Words don't create a world; Man speaks like a dog barks To express his ang
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