Memoirs of a Survivor
This year I've read crappy books and I've read outstanding books, but this is the first one that bored me to sleep. Luckily, I read it on the Greyhound, so snoozing was pretty much the best thing I could have done. Thanks, Doris.
Maybe it's just different tastes. I feel like Lessing created a few flashes of a story I'd be interested in reading. Where were the gathering tribes going? What were all those people doing to scavenge the parts they sold in collected markets? What happened to folks picked up by the powers that be? What was the deal with the cat-dog? I wanted to know more about the amoral children living in the sewers and the sexual morals created in an end-times situation.
Instead I got a sort of dreamy, drifty, shoulder-shrugging, oblivious side view of the whole affair. A story about a girl's first experience with love and sex, but without any real passion applied to the tale telling. And something about an alternate reality that may or may not exist only in the narrator's mind.
final thought: Not my cup of tea, but there was enough happening around the borders that I wouldn't refuse to try another of her novels.
11 comments:
I've only read one Doris lessing novel (The Good Terrorist) and had a similar reaction - it was alright and good-ish in parts but less than riveting..
So that's sort of her style, I guess.
Send you a book?
Why the bleedin' hell would I want to send you a book?
You some sort of free loader?
Ya cheap-skate.
And anyway
With The Krap you read...you would never appreciate the type of highbrow literature of The Pineapples.
I might pinch a book from my 10 year old and send that one to you.
That's more you style
Send me a book?
Bloody Hell
WHAT A NERVE
I knew it!
Blog Owner approval
Perhaps
I will send you
1984
This is probably the worst offender in that regard: I've read quite a lot of Lessing, and this is the only one I couldn't finish (and I like end-of-the-world stuff). If you want some GOOD, READABLE science-fiction by her, try 'The Fifth Child'.
I've already got a copy. But I appreciate the offer.
jrsm: I'll keep an eye out for it. Like I said, I'd be willing to give her another shot.
Yup, yup, yup. The whole apocalypse thing was a sidebar. Parenthetical, if you will. Seeds of a terrific story here but a very odd execution. The links between the narrator's emotional state and the "place behind the wall" were so tight that at one point I actually thought the whole thing -- Emily, Hugo, "it," the feral children -- was going to turn out be a hallucination about the narrator's abusive childhood. Glad that turned out not to be true, that's almost as bad as the "Oh, it was ooonly a dream" tack.
No kidding, that's always a slap in the face. I mean, MOAS wasn't exactly what I wanted to read, but at least it didn't stoop to that level.
She also wrote one called the Cleft about a society of women who one day evolve a man...I think. Or something. It got kind of weird reviews. I've always wanted to read her but never got around to it. Maybe I'll read that one but avoid this one as it sounds very meh.
Tell me how that one goes.
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