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Loading... Diary of a Bad Yearby J.M. Coetzee
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Certainly not Coetzee's best! the fiction didnt go deep and the non fiction was too brief - but an apt title. Very interesting style. Pretty good overall. Fascinating novel to read with its three-concurrent-strand structure. I enjoyed the essays and the way they are counterpointed in the two narratives that run below the essays. While the essays may be a little uneven and dry to some, they offer a lot to think about. A brief review can't really do justice to the complexity of the book which gives up its meaning not only through the words but through the structure and through the interplay between words and structure, words and characters, characters and characters. The overall theme seems to be how do we live in a world full of paradoxes/contradictions, a world that seems to be pervaded by dishonour and shame (the things he explores in the essays). He suggests that one way people do it is through "inner emigration". The two other characters, Anya and Alan, offer through their comments and actions different ways of viewing the same world. There is no easy conclusion ... 0.045 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0670018759, Hardcover)A new work of fiction by the Nobel Prize–winning author of DisgraceIn this brilliant new work of fiction, J. M. Coetzee once again breaks new literary ground with a book that is, in the words of its main character, “a response to the present in which I find myself.” Diary of a Bad Year takes on the world of politics—a new topic for Coetzee—and explores the role of the writer in our times with an extraordinary moral compass. At the center of the book is “Señor C,” an aging author who has been asked to write his thoughts on the state of the world by his German publisher. These thoughts, called “Strong Opinions,” address a wide range of subjects and include a scathing indictment of Bush, Cheney, and Blair, as well as a witheringly honest examination of everything from Machiavelli and the current state of the university to music, literature, and intelligent design, offering unexpected perceptions and insightful arguments along the way. Meanwhile, someone new enters the writer’s life: Anya, the beautiful young woman whom he hires to type his manuscript. The relationship that develops between Señor C and Anya has a profound effect on both of them. It also changes the course of Anya’s relationship with Alan, the successful, swaggering man whom she lives with—and who has designs on Señor C’s bank account. Through these characters, Coetzee creates an ingenious literary game that will enthrall readers and surprise them with its emotional power. Bold, funny, and sad, as well as intellectually clever and satisfying, Diary of a Bad Year is a journey into the mind and heart of one of the world’s most acclaimed and accomplished writers. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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Each page is divided into three sections and the story is told from the perspective of each character. I started by reading each page from top to bottom then switched to reading the opinion or essay piece of each chapter, then flipping back to catch up on the typist and writer's relationship, and then flipping back yet again to read about the relationship between the typist and her lover idiot. Sounds tedious and frustrating, but it's really not. The sections are generally only 2 to 3 pages long. The connections of the three separate narratives are sometimes subtle, follow slightly different time lines, and weave together beautifully to create a new way of telling a story.
What I found interesting is how the old writer's opinions were slowly influenced by the opinions of the young typist. The interactions between these two became an enriching influence to each live. The Australian 'Warren Buffet' wannabe remained a loser throughout the book.
Thanks to the final opinion, I now feel compelled to read Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov, and soon. (