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Blindness by José Saramago
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Blindness (Harvest Book)

by Jose Saramago

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5,049140398 (4.18)128
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Harvest Books (1999), Edition: 1, Paperback, 352 pages

Member:danahlongley
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English (122)  Dutch (6)  Spanish (5)  Portuguese (2)  French (2)  German (1)  Danish (1)  Italian (1)  All languages (140)
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Un récit qui fait réfléchir en posant des questions sans pour autant offrir de solutions. ( )
  lacurieuse | Dec 4, 2009 |
I picked this up from the library, read quite a bit, but then realised I just had no energy to finish it. It was just far too bleak for me. Too much about Humankind's Inhumanity To Humankind, and things just kept on getting worse, with no indication that it would get better.

I was, truth be told, quite relieved to put it down and move on to more entertaining fare.
  wookiebender | Nov 17, 2009 |
This was my first Saramago book and I literally could not put it down. I loved how the text actually made me feel as though I too was blind - despite the fact that I was visually absorbing the words off the page. I've been disappointed by the fact that none of my friends have shared my enthusiasm. ( )
  ascgrrl | Oct 23, 2009 |
Just gorgeous bleakness. And although few could end a story like this with utmost satisfaction, I was still very happy with my first taste of Saramago. ( )
  nickiplum | Oct 19, 2009 |
In Blindness, Portuguese Nobelist José Saramago's dystopian fable, unnamed people in an unnamed country are suddenly stricken blind. Due to fear of contagion, the early victims are herded into asylums, offered no medical help, given meager rations, and left to themselves to organize a civilized community - or not, as it turns out.

This book cries out for discussion, but I would not recommend it to any book club that prefers uplifting, ladylike books. It is harrowing and graphic. I had tears in my eyes at one point, not from sadness exactly but from...horror, I guess. As for the writing style, Saramago employs run-on sentences in long paragraphs, with dialog set off only by quotation marks, so it is sometimes hard to puzzle out who is speaking. I've mentioned before that I find the lack of quotation marks a distancing device, but that was not the case here. The writing creates the kind of disorientation that the newly blind might be experiencing.

My brief and untutored review can't do justice to a book that demands more analysis. I'm still thinking about it. ( )
2 vote CasualFriday | Oct 12, 2009 |
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Epigraph
If you can see, look.

If you can look, observe.

-- From the Book of Exhortations
Dedication
For Pilar
For my daughter Violante
First words
The amber light came on.
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Blindness (novel)

José Saramago

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0156007754, Paperback)

In an unnamed city in an unnamed country, a man sitting in his car waiting for a traffic light to change is suddenly struck blind. But instead of being plunged into darkness, this man sees everything white, as if he "were caught in a mist or had fallen into a milky sea." A Good Samaritan offers to drive him home (and later steals his car); his wife takes him by taxi to a nearby eye clinic where they are ushered past other patients into the doctor's office. Within a day the man's wife, the taxi driver, the doctor and his patients, and the car thief have all succumbed to blindness. As the epidemic spreads, the government panics and begins quarantining victims in an abandoned mental asylum--guarded by soldiers with orders to shoot anyone who tries to escape. So begins Portuguese author José Saramago's gripping story of humanity under siege, written with a dearth of paragraphs, limited punctuation, and embedded dialogue minus either quotation marks or attribution. At first this may seem challenging, but the style actually contributes to the narrative's building tension, and to the reader's involvement.

In this community of blind people there is still one set of functioning eyes: the doctor's wife has affected blindness in order to accompany her husband to the asylum. As the number of victims grows and the asylum becomes overcrowded, systems begin to break down: toilets back up, food deliveries become sporadic; there is no medical treatment for the sick and no proper way to bury the dead. Inevitably, social conventions begin to crumble as well, with one group of blind inmates taking control of the dwindling food supply and using it to exploit the others. Through it all, the doctor's wife does her best to protect her little band of blind charges, eventually leading them out of the hospital and back into the horribly changed landscape of the city.

Blindness is in many ways a horrific novel, detailing as it does the total breakdown in society that follows upon this most unnatural disaster. Saramago takes his characters to the very edge of humanity and then pushes them over the precipice. His people learn to live in inexpressible filth, they commit acts of both unspeakable violence and amazing generosity that would have been unimaginable to them before the tragedy. The very structure of society itself alters to suit the circumstances as once-civilized, urban dwellers become ragged nomads traveling by touch from building to building in search of food. The devil is in the details, and Saramago has imagined for us in all its devastation a hell where those who went blind in the streets can never find their homes again, where people are reduced to eating chickens raw and packs of dogs roam the excrement-covered sidewalks scavenging from corpses.

And yet in the midst of all this horror Saramago has written passages of unsurpassed beauty. Upon being told she is beautiful by three of her charges, women who have never seen her, "the doctor's wife is reduced to tears because of a personal pronoun, an adverb, a verb, an adjective, mere grammatical categories, mere labels, just like the two women, the others, indefinite pronouns, they too are crying, they embrace the woman of the whole sentence, three graces beneath the falling rain." In this one woman Saramago has created an enduring, fully developed character who serves both as the eyes and ears of the reader and as the conscience of the race. And in Blindness he has written a profound, ultimately transcendent meditation on what it means to be human. --Alix Wilber

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 13:03:31 -0500)

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