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Loading... Pygmyby Chuck Palahniuk
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. i enjoyed the story, but it was hard to read. i don't think i got used to the style till 3/4 of the way through. regardless it was funny and entertaining, i’d gladly read it again (if only to go over passages i had trouble understanding). Palahniuk’s still one of my favourite authors. ( )As a rabid Palahniuk fan, I was tickled to get this book and start it. As I read the first page, my first response was WTF Chuck?!? Another gimmicky style? The book is written as if it is a first person account of a person whose primary language isn't English, but the account is written in English. For example, flowers are called "plant genitals." I almost quit the book, but I kept on, and I finally adapted to the writing style. The story is about Pygmy and his comrades, who were taken from their parents at a very young age and made into weapons of "the state." We never find out which country--Palahniuk does this on purpose--the country who wants to destroy the USA is a composition of what could be many other countries. Anyway, Pygmy and his comrades all enter the USA as foreign exchange students, with their goal to inflict "Operation Havoc." I really did enjoy the story, even as distracted as I was by the writing. I really wish Ole Chuck would just weave us a few good novels without the gimmicks. He's a great writer, has a huge base and doesn't need to "play." Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe his gimmicks are forever sealing his fate as one of the greatest contemporary writers of our time. I have to confess that I'm not much of a Palahniuk fan - even for me, his books can get a little creepy (and that's saying something). But I liked this book. Written in the strange syntax of a non-native English speaker (a sleeper infiltrated into America with a perplexing mission), the story follows Pygmy's adventures, with periodic flashbacks to his training in an unnamed Communist country. True to his inner voice, Palahniuk never once drops character. A little tough to get into, this book is worth reading to the end. I'm still "reading" this book and I think I like it. I am listening to the audiobook, narrated by Paul Michael Garcia. I don't thing I would have been able to get into it otherwise. The broken English style of writing is hard to grasp, but I got it after a few minutes of listening. So far so good. I'll state from the outset that I greatly admire Chuck Palahniuk for his inventive storytelling, muscular language, and his ability to talk about really nasty stuff in a funny way. So, my reading of his latest novel, PYGMY, is definitely colored by that bias.I'd say this is a worthy addition to his canon. But like his other work, PYGMY isn't without its challenges. It's dark, visceral, and dripping with various bodily fluids.PYGMY follows the misadventures of Agent Number 67, sent to the American Midwest by an undisclosed Maoist dictatorship to inflict "Operation Havoc" on the corrupt, fat and stupid running dogs of Imperialism known to us as the American people. He and a number of other agents have been sent in a student exchange program. At first, you might find the way the story is told to be quite a hurdle. Pygmy (so named by his host family because of his short stature) tells the story in a series of dispatches to his government, using a kind of pidgin English. I got used to it within a chapter or so, but there are occasional paragraphs that are so dense with description you will definitely have to read them twice to understand what he's really trying to say. For example: "Traversing dark environment en route destination, surrounded mating cry cricket, croak of bulls frog, lecture this agent concerning France missive entitled Le Defi Americain. How admonish intellectual elite over manner United States numerous multinational corporation Kodak, Gillette, General Motor endeavor tangle entire globe ensnared tentacles sucking wealth for digest and fatten parent sovereign American nation, leeching life energy addition opportunity during render subject nation stripped resources and native cultures."But when Pygmy's voice works, it really sings. I found the book came to life in the scenes where Pygmy describes traditional high school rituals, such as Glee Club, the Model United Nations, school dances, and the adolescent ritual of dodgeball:"Commencement of ritual, physical superior males select best combatants for accompany into battle, thus ranking all from most-best to least desirable for reproduction during females note close attention. Next then, divided males engage violent assault upon each opposite army, battering with inflated bladders latex rubber."Over course conflict, males boasting superior musculature inflict injury upon males typical of superior intellect, although suffering inferior height-to-weight ratio, body mass index, and stature."At completion dodgeball ritual, females made full aware which males present most-desirable physical traits. Vanquished males culled by injury, weak reproductive citizens force self-select, redirect, instead impregnate mates, procreate offspring, instead channel aggressions chess club, focus sexual ambitions science club."And it is the Science Fair that is the focus of Pygmy and the other agent's "Operation Havoc" -- for Pygmy, this is not just because of his orders, but because his host sister, "cat sister" as he calls her, is also working on a science project for the fair, and while she works on it, he falls for her. (She is one of the few Americans for whom he has any respect.) Yes, this is a kind of love story in addition to being a satire.In many ways, this is a more broad satire than I've seen in other Palahniuk works, but I enjoyed the farcical nature of some of the scenes -- I laughed out loud in a few places. Also really enjoyed the double-edged nature of the satire, which is always the best kind. It makes fun of American culture and in some ways, the satire of totalitarianism is just as savage. (You don't see many books opening with a quote by Hitler.) I'd recommend it, with the proviso that you should check out the sample chapter [pdf link:], to see if the way the story is told will work for you.Oh, and don't stop reading at chapter two -- the anal rape scene is a central plot point, so it's not gratuitous. (Perhaps some of the description, but not the event itself.)You can learn more about the book at Chuck's official website, and there are more reviews available at Goodreads.
Readers of Palahniuk’s excellent early work (“Fight Club,” “Invisible Monsters”) will sense a shallow, phoned-in quality to his new novel. Despite its transgressive trappings and cultural-critique posturing, “Pygmy” is as defanged as Marilyn Manson. For all its satirical tail-swallowing, however, the novel's strongest currents of feeling swirl around the hero's experiences in the education system. Behind the often quite funny overkill and casually exiguous plot, it's essentially a fantasy about being a small, picked-on outsider in high school while fancying yourself a secret agent on a mission of revenge. Sloppy yet smart, Chuck Palahniuk's "Pygmy" veers from sublimely ridiculous to just plain ridiculous, sometimes within a single paragraph.
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