Paranoid Fish hat Kindred bewertet: 4 Sterne

Kindred von Octavia E. Butler
Dana, a modern black woman, is celebrating her twenty-sixth birthday with her new husband when she is snatched abruptly from …
Vor kurzem hierher umgezogen von bookwyrm.social. Versuche, mir ein möglichst weites Feld an Literatur zu erschließen. Alle Epochen, alle Genres, mit besonderer Vorliebe für die Postmoderne und Science-Fiction. Wenn ich deutschsprachige Bücher lese, sind auch meine Kommentare und Rezensionen auf deutsch.
Recently moved here from bookwyrm.social.Trying to explore a wide range of literature, especially fiction. All periods and genres, with a preference for postmodern literature and science fiction. When I read english books, my comments and reviews will be in english as well.
★★★★★ überragend / outstanding ★★★★☆ gutes Buch / a good book ★★★☆☆ ist okay / it's okay ★★☆☆☆ mochte ich nicht / I didn't like it ★☆☆☆☆ unterirdisch / really bad
My Favorite Books/Lieblingsbücher
Mastodon: Weird Fish weirdfish@literatur.social
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Dana, a modern black woman, is celebrating her twenty-sixth birthday with her new husband when she is snatched abruptly from …

The Picture of Dorian Gray is a philosophical novel by Irish writer Oscar Wilde. A shorter novella-length version was published …


Er ist Musiker, Mitte vierzig und mit seinem glanzlosen Leben eigentlich nicht unzufrieden. Da lernt er Vanessa kennen, Schauspielerin, jung …

Nathan the Wise (original German title: Nathan der Weise) is the last play published by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing. The play …

Iron Rinn aus Newark ist ein Mann mit mörderischer Vergangenheit, vor der er ein Leben lang flieht. Der Weltkriegsveteran, ehemalige …
Grotesk, absurd und manchmal etwas surreal... ich mochte besonders den Sprachwitz, der ist wirklich einmalig gut (obwohl an der Geschichte nun wirklich nichts Witziges ist). Der Handlung zu folgen ist etwas herausfordernd, aber das macht nichts, man findet immer wieder rein, und im Grunde liegt bei diesem Roman die große Kunst eher in der Form als im Inhalt. Wie Nolte mit Sprache umgeht, mal albern, mal beinahe poetisch, wie er Clichés durch den Kakao zieht und gleich darauf wieder ganz unvorhersehbar mit allen Erwartungen und Konventionen bricht, das gehört zu dem ungewöhnlichsten, was ich bisher in deutscher Sprache gelesen habe. Zuweilen fühlte ich mich an Pynchon oder Burroughs erinnert. Aber irgendwie ist Alff dann doch einzigartig.
Grotesk, absurd und manchmal etwas surreal... ich mochte besonders den Sprachwitz, der ist wirklich einmalig gut (obwohl an der Geschichte nun wirklich nichts Witziges ist). Der Handlung zu folgen ist etwas herausfordernd, aber das macht nichts, man findet immer wieder rein, und im Grunde liegt bei diesem Roman die große Kunst eher in der Form als im Inhalt. Wie Nolte mit Sprache umgeht, mal albern, mal beinahe poetisch, wie er Clichés durch den Kakao zieht und gleich darauf wieder ganz unvorhersehbar mit allen Erwartungen und Konventionen bricht, das gehört zu dem ungewöhnlichsten, was ich bisher in deutscher Sprache gelesen habe. Zuweilen fühlte ich mich an Pynchon oder Burroughs erinnert. Aber irgendwie ist Alff dann doch einzigartig.

Tagsüber hilft Juno ihrem schwerkranken Mann Jupiter dabei, seinen Alltag zu meistern. Außerdem ist sie Künstlerin, tanzt und spielt Theater. …
It is impressive how Pynchon combines so many opposites in his work. Humour and tragedy, seriousness and silliness, ugliness and beauty, historical fact and fiction, the real and the surreal, the sublime and the profane, interspersed with, yes indeed, musical scenes. Over hundreds of pages, he maintains a style that challenges his audience to the utmost, that demands total concentration in its density, that is not only very demanding but also very appealing and often of poetic beauty, and that breaks with many literary conventions, even today. Although the horror of war strikes with full force in the opening scene, the basic tone of the novel is rather satirical, or picaresque. The main character, Tyrone Slothrop, an American GI investigating the impact sites of German V2 rockets towards the end of the Second World War in and around London for a British organization, gets caught up in a maelstrom of …
It is impressive how Pynchon combines so many opposites in his work. Humour and tragedy, seriousness and silliness, ugliness and beauty, historical fact and fiction, the real and the surreal, the sublime and the profane, interspersed with, yes indeed, musical scenes. Over hundreds of pages, he maintains a style that challenges his audience to the utmost, that demands total concentration in its density, that is not only very demanding but also very appealing and often of poetic beauty, and that breaks with many literary conventions, even today. Although the horror of war strikes with full force in the opening scene, the basic tone of the novel is rather satirical, or picaresque. The main character, Tyrone Slothrop, an American GI investigating the impact sites of German V2 rockets towards the end of the Second World War in and around London for a British organization, gets caught up in a maelstrom of alleged and actual conspiracies and in the abyss of his own paranoia and that of his pursuers. In the course of the plot, he is whisked away to the “Zone”, post-war Germany, where he is trying to find out out the secret of Imipolex G, a new, mysterious type of plastic in the V2 rockets, and increasingly loses his mind, not least due to the influence of drugs. There is also an esoteric organization called PISCES, which practices (para-)psychological warfare, the "Schwarzkommando", a (fictitious) special unit of African soldiers from the former German Southwest colony, and an SS lieutenant with sadomasochistic interests who is pursuing a sinister plan with a V2 rocket with the serial number 00000. Although much of Gravity's Rainbow is historically accurate, it would be wrong to call it historical fiction. Don't believe Pynchon, he plays with history and realities and also with his readers. It has to be said quite clearly: the novel is exhausting. It is difficult and demanding, you have to work your way through it. You will get lost at times, you will forget characters that were introduced at the beginning and only reappear 600 pages later. The author doesn't take this into consideration, you are never “picked up” at any point. But if you are prepared to see reading as a project, you will be richly rewarded with crazy ideas, strange conspiracy theories, disturbing human abysses and linguistic virtuosity. And, of course, musical scenes.