Evolution Man: Or, How I Ate My Father
by Roy Lewis
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"The Evolution Man is a novel about your basic upwardly mobile Pleistocene cave family - as they come down from trees (except for Uncle Vanya, who insists that it's the stupidest thing man ever did), dislodge a family of bears from the best cave in the neighborhood, and widen their digestive horizons to keep down things not only disgusting but disagreeable as well. Life cannot be all snails and sweetbreads." "Recorded here is the correct version of the invention of fire, the first show more intellectual argument about shadows, and an eye-witness account of the first human courtship."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved show lessTags
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I got hold of The Evolution Man (aka What We Did to Father aka How I Ate My Father aka Once upon an Ice Age) after reading Terry Pratchett's repeated recommendations in A Slip of the Keyboard. It really is hilarious, a novel of cavemen who talk to each other in mid-twentieth century schoolboy prose, with names like Oswald, Ernest and Wilbur - clearly aimed in part at William Golding's The Inheritors, and perhaps also at any number of caveman films. Their father worries about which end of the Pleistocene era they are living at, but invents fire, thus causing a technological revolution. I'm sure that the young Douglas Adams must have read it too; there are strong echoes of the humour of show more Hitch-hiker here, if anything more so than of Pratchett (though there are shades of Lewis's the treatment of technology in the early Rincewind/Twoflower relationship). It's a very short book at 120 pages, and there really is only one joke, but it's worked through in several different variations to a satisfactory and tasty conclusion. show less
I got hold of The Evolution Man (aka What We Did to Father aka How I Ate My Father aka Once upon an Ice Age) after reading Terry Pratchett's repeated recommendations in A Slip of the Keyboard. It really is hilarious, a novel of cavemen who talk to each other in mid-twentieth century schoolboy prose, with names like Oswald, Ernest and Wilbur - clearly aimed in part at William Golding's The Inheritors, and perhaps also at any number of caveman films. Their father worries about which end of the Pleistocene era they are living at, but invents fire, thus causing a technological revolution. I'm sure that the young Douglas Adams must have read it too; there are strong echoes of the humour of show more Hitch-hiker here, if anything more so than of Pratchett (though there are shades of Lewis's the treatment of technology in the early Rincewind/Twoflower relationship). It's a very short book at 120 pages, and there really is only one joke, but it's worked through in several different variations to a satisfactory and tasty conclusion. show less
ok, di tutto ciò che mi aspettavo da questo libro, ho ottenuto solo una parte: pensavo di spanciarmi dalle risate, invece ho sorriso a denti stretti, pensavo di trovare tanta rovente satira sulla società moderna attraverso un racconto che parlava di cavernicoli, invece ne ho trovato solo una parte diluita nella smania dell'autore di essere scientificamente accurato. Insomma, leggere di cavernicoli che affrontano i loro problemi con la consapevolezza di uomini moderni è abbastanza spassoso, ma non così spassoso come mi sarei aspettato. Inoltre ho storto il naso per un'altra cosa: questo libro è la fiera della misoginia e del maschilismo, le donne, dove non sono stupide e capaci solo di cucinare, sono manipolatrici e arriviste (le show more solite accuse che si fanno alle donne) e il concetto è un po' troppo insistito per non far sorgere il sospetto che non si tratti solo di comicità...mah! show less
The first chunk of this book had me chortling on the train, it starts out with a definite bang. I think after that the tone changes ever-so-slightly, less wildly amusing into a somewhat more dramatized tale, but it's still plenty amusing and overall light-hearted, and a very quick read.
Underneath the silly humor, I think Lewis has some truly thought-provoking ideas about our history and evolution. Obviously these things occurred on a much smaller scale, in a much less blatant manner, than he describes; but the notions behind the irreverent and playful dialog of the ape-men seem quite relevant and true to life, and they're presented in such a fun entertaining style that he gets you thinking about it without being philosophical or show more scholarly. I think it takes a lot of talent to write such a cheerful fast-paced comic, and yet insightful, work about such a huge weighted topic. Well done! show less
Underneath the silly humor, I think Lewis has some truly thought-provoking ideas about our history and evolution. Obviously these things occurred on a much smaller scale, in a much less blatant manner, than he describes; but the notions behind the irreverent and playful dialog of the ape-men seem quite relevant and true to life, and they're presented in such a fun entertaining style that he gets you thinking about it without being philosophical or show more scholarly. I think it takes a lot of talent to write such a cheerful fast-paced comic, and yet insightful, work about such a huge weighted topic. Well done! show less
Libro molto divertente basato su un semplice stratagemma: rileggere le (ipotetiche) gesta di un uomo di Neandertal attraverso la sensibilità e il lessico di un uomo contemporaneo. Con al centro una più che mai controversa scoperta del fuoco, le gesta ironiche e spesso crudeli di una orda di nostri progenitori.
Well, this is the revisionist book to end (or begin) them all. Once you understand that we wanted to be modern humans from the moment we developed speech, or better yet even before then this whole book falls neatly into place. I see by the copyright date that it predated Douglas Adams' famous reference to the arguments about whether coming down from the trees was a good idea for ancient man. Funny book, but the subtitle is a bit of a spoiler.
This book made me want to wander the streets and press copies of it into the hands of strangers. A family group of proto-humans who speak like English aristocrats? Brilliant!
Questi ominidi vivono nel Pleistocene, e conoscono i nomi di tutte le ere geologiche, hanno nomi come Millicent, Wilbur, Ernest, Petronilla, usano un linguaggio forbito, ma all’occorrenza comunicano anche a gesti, e dopo l’invenzione del fuoco, si siedono a scaldarsi alla fiamma, mangiando la loro buona carne cruda…
Insomma, fantasiose e divertenti aggiunte a parte, leggendo questo libro non si può fare a meno di pensare che le cose potrebbero essere andate proprio così! :)
http://www.naufragio.it/iltempodileggere/3367
Insomma, fantasiose e divertenti aggiunte a parte, leggendo questo libro non si può fare a meno di pensare che le cose potrebbero essere andate proprio così! :)
http://www.naufragio.it/iltempodileggere/3367
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Il più grande uomo scimmia del pleistocene
- Original title
- What We Did to Father
- Alternate titles
- The Evolution Man
- Original publication date
- 1960
- Important places
- Africa
- Dedication
- To my darling daughters, Dr Theodore Reik, and some others
- First words
- When the winds blew strongly from the North, bringing an icy reminder that the great ice-cap was still advancing, we used to pile all our stores of brushwood and broken trees in front of the cave, make a really roaring fire, ... (show all)and tell ourselves that however far south it came this time, even in Africa, we could meet it and beat it.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And for another, it is long past your bedtime.
- Original language
- English
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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