The Book Of Revelation by Rupert Thomson, , 0747545693 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
 Compare book prices at 85 bookstores
Add to Favorite Tell a Friend Link to Us Contact Us Help Home Wish List New!
us online discount book stores United States | canada online books for less Canada | Rare/Out-of-print Books

The Book Of Revelation, cheap new, used books  The Book Of Revelation
Author: Rupert Thomson  
ISBN: 0747545693   /   Paperback
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC   /   2000-06-05
List Price: £7.99
Similar Books   More Details from Amazon.co.uk
Compare new, used book prices

Editorial Reviews:
Rupert Thomson has a reputation as something of a cult novelist: his earlier books have garnered increasing respect and acclaim without ever really propelling him into authorship's Premier League. His previous novel Soft marked an upswing in terms of recognition, and The Book Of Revelation, his sixth, succeeds in augmenting his reputation further, for it is both psychologically and formally daring in a precise and intelligent manner.

The narrator of the book is a dancer living in Amsterdam. One day he goes out to buy some cigarettes for his girlfriend--also a dancer--and is kidnapped and held for a period of time before being released. Although Thomson's book is not as plot-dependent as a thriller, for example, it would be unfair to give away too much, simply because the force of each development in the book and the response of the reader are part of the strength and psychological sharpness of the novel and its emotional geography, which is comparable to the narrator's own mental map of the city:

"There was a sense in which the city had been trying to tell me something all along. You'll never solve this case. You might as well forget it. But I had not been listening, of course. Look at the map. It's all there, in a way. The whole story".

At a time when so many writers are obsessed with trauma--particularly child-abuse and its psychological legacy--Thomson chooses to explore the concept through an event that is both more and less sensational. The narrator undergoes an ordeal that, given its aura of artifice and ritual, might find its literary parallel in, for example, The Story of O, but the book also distances the reader from the traumatic events by switching from first to third person narration--a simple device that complicates and deepens the effect of the book as a whole. This shift in narrative position suggests both a complex questioning of and reference to certain literary tropes of confinement and abuse as well as directing the reader to reflect on the psychological distancing perhaps necessary to deal with the trauma.

Charting the narrator's attempt to live with the ineradicable legacy of what he has experienced, his revelations are compellingly and acutely delineated: Thomson's strange, disturbing tale asks profound questions about the burden of the past, especially of past events that set one apart from others rather than providing a shared, communal retrospection: how do we relate to others when we have experienced events that defy rationality, explanation or resolution? --Burhan Tufail


Customer Reviews:
Changing, but not 2 halves     
Several other reviewers saw this novel as being in two halves. I disagree. It is simply the story of one man's life: before and after having been captured and abused by 3 masked women. The story is written in the first person by the victim and the reader begins to see what is going through his mind following his release, the measures he takes in trying to find his captors and his actions each time he thinks he has succeeded. This is a strange book and yet I found it enjoyable. I gave it 4 stars, as I thought that the ending could have been more conclusive.
unreconstructed junk     
I cannot believe the praise this is getting! There was enough hype on the book itself...why continue it on the net?

Unlikeable smug tortured dance artist gets kidnapped and subjected to predictable sexual degradation by a bunch of birds. He drifts round the world
and struggles to come to with his 'mental scars'.

The one memorable scene involves a screwdriver to the foreskin. That my sister's ex gave her the copy I read with the dedication "there are a few things we could try in here" is the most worrying thing.

Everything and nothing revealed     
Two things stick in the mind in this unintentionally funny book. First, when the narrator is taken in the rear by a woman in a rubber mask with a strapped on dildo who whispers a naughty word repeatedly in his ear as she penetrates him and, against his will, makes him come (she applies Extra Virgin oil to reduce his discomfort - a nice touch). Second, when he decides to sleep with every nurse in Amsterdam in the hope of uncovering his abductors. What is funny here is the basic flaw in the plot: they would have seen him coming so would not have slept with him. So it's a pointless exercise. A bit like this book really. Which is no doubt the point.
Unbelievably bad     
This is probably the worst book i have ever read. My advice is to not read it. The plot is hackneyed and cliched and it's impossible to feel anything other than extreme dislike for the nauseating lead character. It manages to achieve the odious feat of being both depressing and incredibly annoying. This is the first review i have ever written about anything but this book was so bad i felt compelled to share my views on it. If you're thinking of buying it, i would use the money to do something more pleasurable instead. Like, say, buying a tweezer and plucking out every single hair on your head.
Brilliant writing, slightly frustrating structure     
It's typical of this author to give us a book in two halves. He did it with 'The Insult' too. I found that frustrating because I found the first half incredibly exciting and was shocked to have the story end, only to be replaced with another, albeit connected tale.
This happens in this novel to some extent, and it's once again like having the floor fall from under you. You lose the satisfaction of the ending you're expecting. Is this a bad thing? Maybe, maybe not.
The first part of the book is stunningly well written, I think. Equal to anything Ian McEwan has written, inducing that same quality of dawning realisation that makes your heart beat faster. It's very cinematic, very visual.
The second part of the book is less successful, but after the initial disappointment, you get back into it and become excited again. It's a dangerous trick though.
Overall, I'd say this is his best work so far.
View more reviews or product details from Amazon.co.uk


 

            

 

Looking for Rare, Out of Print Books? Click here


About Us
 Recommend Us Bookmark Link To Us Wish List New!


us online discount book stores United States | buy uk books online United Kingdom | canada online books for less Canada

(c) 2004 BookFinder4u UK - Search Cheap new, used, out of print books.


Suggestion Box:
Let us know anything you like or don't like about this website.