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Mobius Dick (2004)

por Andrew Crumey

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
2517106,436 (3.29)6
'In some ways this is an edgily modern book, with Dick's namesake, Philip K Dick, among its guiding spirits. Admirers of Flann O'Brien's fictions will be struck by the beguiling ways in which Crumey uses unreliable narrators and worlds within worlds. In another sense the novel reaches back to a Renaissance aesthetic, in which art and scholarship, if not quite the same thing, are mutually adoring twins or lovers in a fable. Refreshingly, this is a novel in which science is a central character rather than a metaphor for something else.âe¨That said, it isn't a boffin-fest but a glitteringly original piece of storytelling, unapologetically intelligent, driven by tightly focused narrative skill. It is also acerbically funny, peppered with digs, while an Orwellian irony makes clear that the questions implied are not about some imagined culture, but concern the one in which we wake up every day.âe¨There is a winning sense of spaciousness in the writing, a feeling that the words are pouring out spontaneously. This quality is all the more impressive because the ideas are complex: indeed, those of us who are a bit rusty on Heisenberg's interpretation of wave functions may sense we're missing out. And even readers who marvel at Crumey's expansive, frisky prose may feel the allusion to cultural titans becomes a little relentless: Melville, Thomas Mann, Foucault, Nietzsche and Lacan are all name- checked in the first few pages. ("Writing about writers is best avoided," comments Dick's therapist. This isn't advice Crumey would tolerate.) But while Mobius Dick is a work of sophisticated erudition, its playfulness and artistry make it a page-turner, too. It is perhaps the only novel about quantum mechanics you could imagine reading while lying on a beach.'Joseph O'Connor in The Guardian'Ingenious' is far too pallid a term of praise for this cunningly contrived entertainment, which may sound ponderous in outline but is actually a breeze, by turns slyly comic and oddly melancholy. For most readers, the soundness of its science will be of small consequence; as fiction it is solid plutonium, and unflaggingly enjoyable.'Kevin Jackson in The Sunday Times… (más)
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» Ver también 6 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 7 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
A quick glance at the customer reviews of this book on Amazon shows how widely opinion is divided. One five star review asserts that it is 'original, thought-provoking, erudite … and above all great fun' while the next dismisses it as 'confusing and tedious'. I am not sure whether I agree with neither … or perhaps both.

There can certainly be no question about the thought-provoking. In its three hundred pages this book offers a wide swathe of subjects including theoretical physics with cameo appearances from Schrodinger, psychology and the interpretation of dreams, the travails of nineteenth century novelists with an exchange between Hermann Melville and Nathaniel Hawthorne, and the descent into mental disrepair of Robert Schumann, all enmeshed with some what-if speculations about the outcome of the last world war and a contemporary physicist's recollections of an old lover. 'What, no ventriloquists? I hear you ask, and that does indeed some to be one of the few fields of artistic endeavour that doesn't rate a mention.

On reflection I feel I did enjoy it. It is not an easy read, but it is rewarding, though I also think that some of the apostrophising was a little over-extended. Hamlet with nothing but the prince, perhaps, and a surfeit of tangential sidebars. ( )
  Eyejaybee | Mar 8, 2015 |
Mindbending stuff. I'm not sure I understood everything here. No, let me rephrase that, I am sure I didn’t understand everything here. Parallel realities and alternate histories stirred together by the quantum mechanical effects of an experimental “vacuum array” at a secret test site in Scotland. There are echoes of Calvinoesque metafiction, Dickian reality paranoia, Aldiss’ Frankenstein Unbound, Douglas Adams’ Dirk Gently and Mostly Harmless (without the jokes) ... plus a little political satire and sex too. ( )
1 vota dtw42 | Apr 16, 2011 |
funny, romantic, enlightening ( )
  m.a.harding | Jul 22, 2007 |
I picked this book up on a whim as part of a 3 for 2 deal, intrigued by "perhaps the only novel about quantum mechanics you could imagine reading while lying on a beach". Sadly if I'd been reading this on a beach I'd have fallen asleep and either drowned when the tide came in or burnt to a crisp. I found the book tedious and overly confusing. The whole thing is built on alternate world ideas, and the main storyline following a character's investigation of this idea and bouncing between worlds is interesting. However the lengthy sections dedicated to historical scientists, musicians and writers were boring to me, not least because I didn't have the faintest idea most of the time which details were 'true' and which were alternate. Had the book focussed more on the central character's storyline and worlds I would probably have enjoyed it a lot more, although I'm still not sure I'd go so far as to recommend it to anyone. As it stands this was a book that sounded intriguing but ended up being pretensious and irritating. ( )
  sulkyblue | May 9, 2007 |
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'In some ways this is an edgily modern book, with Dick's namesake, Philip K Dick, among its guiding spirits. Admirers of Flann O'Brien's fictions will be struck by the beguiling ways in which Crumey uses unreliable narrators and worlds within worlds. In another sense the novel reaches back to a Renaissance aesthetic, in which art and scholarship, if not quite the same thing, are mutually adoring twins or lovers in a fable. Refreshingly, this is a novel in which science is a central character rather than a metaphor for something else.âe¨That said, it isn't a boffin-fest but a glitteringly original piece of storytelling, unapologetically intelligent, driven by tightly focused narrative skill. It is also acerbically funny, peppered with digs, while an Orwellian irony makes clear that the questions implied are not about some imagined culture, but concern the one in which we wake up every day.âe¨There is a winning sense of spaciousness in the writing, a feeling that the words are pouring out spontaneously. This quality is all the more impressive because the ideas are complex: indeed, those of us who are a bit rusty on Heisenberg's interpretation of wave functions may sense we're missing out. And even readers who marvel at Crumey's expansive, frisky prose may feel the allusion to cultural titans becomes a little relentless: Melville, Thomas Mann, Foucault, Nietzsche and Lacan are all name- checked in the first few pages. ("Writing about writers is best avoided," comments Dick's therapist. This isn't advice Crumey would tolerate.) But while Mobius Dick is a work of sophisticated erudition, its playfulness and artistry make it a page-turner, too. It is perhaps the only novel about quantum mechanics you could imagine reading while lying on a beach.'Joseph O'Connor in The Guardian'Ingenious' is far too pallid a term of praise for this cunningly contrived entertainment, which may sound ponderous in outline but is actually a breeze, by turns slyly comic and oddly melancholy. For most readers, the soundness of its science will be of small consequence; as fiction it is solid plutonium, and unflaggingly enjoyable.'Kevin Jackson in The Sunday Times

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