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Loading... A Clockwork Orangeby Anthony Burgess
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I tried to read this, but I read about half and had no Idea what I just read (all the slang). I watched the movie, and liked it though. ( )A classic that makes you think. Written when Burgess thought he had only a short time to live. The language in this one is fascinating, and it makes a great companion piece to Orwell's 1984. A devastating portrait of post WW2 youth culture and how it would be be solved. A real horrorshow. A very fast read as I read it one sitting. And a really great story to boot. Burgess creates a whole new language borrowed almost exclusively from Russian. A Clockwork Orange is a magnificent look at the potential of violence within humans (namely the youth), and the horrific actions some may take to tame thoughts and actions of violence in the name of safety within society. While taking place in a dystopia sometime in the future, A Clockwork Orange is readable in any timeframe and puts a horrific mindset of organized chaos among the young Droogs that run the streets at night. For readers first picking up this tale, get ready for a strange slang that may be difficult at first, but just read on, it makes sense and gives the characters an authority as you read along. A great novel with a deep and unsettling theme, A Clockwork Orange is not the story of just violence and unjust government, like the movie would tell us, but it is a story of the violence that is almost natural to youth, and the changing emotions and actions that we, as humans, feel as we grow and mature.
But all in all, “A Clockwork Orange” is a tour-de-force in nastiness, an inventive primer in total violence, a savage satire on the distortions of the single and collective minds. In A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess has written what looks like a nasty little shocker but is really that rare thing in English letters—a philosophical novel. The point may be overlooked because the hero, a teen-age monster, tells all about everything in nadsat, a weird argot that seems to be all his own. Nadsat is neither gibberish nor a Joycean exercise. It serves to put Alex where he belongs—half in and half out of the human race.
References to this work on external resources.
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:23 -0400)
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