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Loading... The Memory Artistsby Jeffrey Moore
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A fabulous mystery by a new Canadian writer, a psychiatrist reflects on his past, an immoral experiement he conducted on young people with a specific and rare psychologocal disorder. Unput downable (sic). Looking for his next book. Moore creates interesting characters with believable relationships, but over all I found the book uneven. Some moments of friendship are absolutely *perfect* and Noel's relationship with his dying mother is extremely well-done. But other parts of the book seem irrelevant and I found many passages difficult to get through. There's lots of potential here, but in the end, Moore doesn't quite deliver. Book started out promising, then devolved as the author kept making easy choices about the characters (and what was the purpose of the arson, if not just to drive everyone into the house?). Starts good, gets wierd. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0670045209, Hardcover)This tragicomic novel revolves around the notion of memory : one character falls into a pit of forgetfulness through Alzheimer's and tries to claw her way out, while the other, her son, suffers from hypermnesia - an inability to forget that warps and scrambles even the simplest communication. Noel Burun's remarkable memory, like that of many famous writers, artists and musicians, comes from the fact that he has synaesthesia - words bring about a kaleidoscopic rush of associated colours. When the story opens, Noel's mother is in the early throes of dementia and we learn her past through flashbacks and the crystalline reminiscences of her son, while her own present is depicted in her own confused interior monologue. Noel is resolved to help her overcome her illness and begins to secretly experiment with various homemade cures - from aromatherapy to homeopathy to chinese medicine. In fact the treatments more often have detrimental side effects such as bowel disorders or fainting and this is the comic part of the text. Also comic is the fact that he does eventually come up with a (suitably New Age) cure. Apart from a paen to memory and poetry (Mnesmosyne is the mother of the Muses), the novel is a satyric and comic literary portrait of new millennium science and alternative medicine, psyciatry and pseudo-psychiatry, art and artistic pretension.(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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That being said, the characters were so interesting that I still enjoyed reading this book. And many of Moore's ideas are fascinating. Jeffrey Moore definitely shows potential, he just isn't there yet with The Memory Artists. (