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Ganancia (1999)

por Richard Powers

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

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6201737,764 (3.78)20
Gain braids together two stories on very different scales. In one, Laura Body, divorced mother of two and a real-estate agent in the small town of Lacewood, Illinois, plunges into a new existence when she learns that she has ovarian cancer. In the other, Clare & Company, a soap manufacturer begun by three brothers in nineteenth-century Boston, grows over the course of a century and a half into an international consumer products conglomerate based in Laura's hometown. Clare's stunning growth reflects the kaleidoscopic history of America; Laura Body's life is changed forever by Clare. The novel's stunning conclusion reveals the countless invisible connections between the largest enterprises and the smallest lives.… (más)
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» Ver también 20 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 17 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
As a reader, I'm sometimes not sure if "Gain" is reporting or fictionalizing history. So much of the narrative appears to recount actual history--the influence of specific corporations, for example--or a summation of technological processes--like the explication of what's involved in developing a disposable camera. On the other hand, the characters are fictional and there is a plot and there is action and there are all the other elements we associate with "story." The approach does remind me of Michener, though--thoroughly researched realism. I am fascinated by "Gain's" accumulation of detail. I've never had ovarian cancer (or any other kind of cancer, for that matter), but, having read this novel, it seems that I understand, or at least am sensitive to, what people go through in chemotherapy. ( )
  gmfbard | Apr 3, 2024 |
Between the Corporations and Cancer, this was the most depressing and boring Powers' book I have ever skim read.

If not being read for the American Authors Challenge, it would have been Pearled at Page 37. ( )
  m.belljackson | Jan 17, 2023 |
I have a complicated relationship with contemporary American fiction. Actually, I flat-out despise most of it. Give me a period novel about Edwardian English gentlemen, Second Empire French coalminers, post-Petrine Russian nobles, or even Depression-era California fruit pickers, and I will be happy, but it seems like I loathe anything set in the modern United States. Why does the life of a person in the recent past seem so full compared to the bland epigones who populate our shelves? Such small characters, such vitiated lives, such small epiphanies. Charles Portis was right: "We're weaker than our fathers, Dupree. We don't even look like them." At the helm of the mightiest empire the world has ever seen, ordinary Americans are the least interesting people on Earth, yet the most willing to over-document their sluggish swirls through the stagnant pond that they call home. It's either self-indulgence or a simple absence of anything real to talk about.

Another reason I get annoyed is that a lot of those kinds of novels make "consumerism" a theme, which I find incredibly boring. What is interesting at all about people consuming goods, talking about consuming goods, or thinking about talking about consuming goods? Nothing. How many novels have we been subjected to where authors try to make "points" about consumerism by including all of those things, lulling the reader into an ostentatiously branded coma so that no one catches on to the complete absence of any action or humanity that would interest a normal person with full control of their faculties? What in the name of God are you trying to SAY? Yet somehow Gain takes both of those themes that otherwise bore me and makes them great. It's two interrelated stories: one, the gradual growth amidst all the turbulence of American history of a small colonial-era soap-making factory called Jephthah Clare & Sons into Clare Inc., a Johnson & Johnson-esque corporate behemoth; and two, Laura Bodey's struggle against ovarian cancer in the modern-day town of Lacewood, IL, where Clare has a factory.

As a big economic history nerd, I confess that I found the first story far more interesting for the most part. In long stretches of sometimes-overwrought prose, Powers has concocted probably the most engrossing life story of a fictional corporation you'll ever read (which may not be a crowded field). Parts of it were easily on the level with a real corporate history like Marc Levinson's superb The Great A&P, or a magisterial economic history like William Cronon's Nature's Metropolis, which Powers clearly alludes to in the part set just prior to the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. Watching the fledgling soap company make its first deals, improve its production process, and slowly expand into other markets to eventually become a titan of industry is honestly enthralling; you can almost see Adam Smith nodding approvingly during the sections on how the various Clare family members improve their firm's ability to truck and barter. There are also plenty of great parts about the chemistry of soap (no really).

Clare is intended to be both a parody of "better living through chemistry"-type companies, particularly as its story moves into the present-day, and also a serious study of how companies become both legal people and also "good corporate citizens", and enmesh themselves in our lives. Think of the sinister Bland corporation in Gravity's Rainbow, or Ambrose Bierce's definition of a corporation as "An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility", or Milton Friedman's infamous arguments in "The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase its Profits" that companies have zero responsibilities to society beyond enhancing shareholder value. While Clare is presented as a fairly benevolent company, taking early Progressive-era steps to bring their workers on board with the company and prevent the labor troubles so typical of the era, it slowly begins to seem like Just Another Company, especially when the narrative gets to the 80s. What starts out as a hagiography subtly becomes a much more nuanced picture.

This is made a little less abstract by Laura's story. She's a divorced mother of 2 kids who's seeing a married guy in her spare time. I expected to be bored stiff by her life, and initially I was, since she spends a lot of the beginning doing mundane ordinary complaining or snarking about consumer products, but Powers eventually won me over by giving her cancer, a time-tested method of increasing reader sympathy dating back at least to Charles Dickens. I've never had or known anyone close to me who had cancer so I don't know how accurate his depiction of it was, but it seemed pretty real and engrossing to me. While a lot of her story was used to present the reader with some Themes (e.g., the growth of Clare is implicitly analogized to the metastasis of cancer cells, the company's efforts to disavow any link between the chemical outputs of the Lacewood factory and the illnesses of the townfolk are contrasted with their equally assiduous efforts to seem like they Care About the Community), the changes in her relationships with her kids and ex-husband came off as genuine and moving. Powers also namedrops Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, a cool Walt Whitman poem.

Overall I liked the book, especially the capitalist cheerleading parts, which I would definitely read more of. While the modern characters occasionally threaten to become as boringly loathsome as their counterparts in a Jonathan Franzen novel, Powers does about the right amount of tearjerking to make them relatable and sympathetic. ( )
  aaronarnold | May 11, 2021 |
At first, I enjoyed the corporate back story of this book and found Laura's story sort of ho-hum. As the book bore on, I began to find the corporate bits tiresome and the Laura story more interesting. It was a weird inversion, as if Powers was trying to make something interesting of a boring bit of sentimental pap and ruin a corporate back story that intrigued me in the beginning. If he had kept both stories solid from start to finish, he might have had a great book.

Overall, the book was pretty mediocre, mostly pretty slim on style. Pretty standard fare for Powers, I guess, since he tends to be information-dense and sort of literary but not a great stylist. I found myself rushing through the last 100 pages and skimming the corporate bits, a pretty rare behavior for me. ( )
  dllh | Jan 6, 2021 |
Two intersecting stories: the 150 years of the Clare corporation, from candles and soap to a a modern chemistry conglomerate, and not even a year of Laura from cancer diagnosis to death. This would be the perfect book for folks to read five hundred years in the future, to understand where we are now and how we got here. ( )
  kukulaj | Nov 18, 2020 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 17 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
AT the beginning of Richard Powers's first novel, published in 1985, an unnamed visitor to a
Detroit museum becomes captivated by a photograph of three Prussian farmers heading for a
dance. The year of the picture -- 1914 -- is crucial to its fascination for him. ''The date,'' he
explains, ''sufficed to show they were not going to their expected dance. I was not going to my
expected dance. We would all be taken blindfolded into a field somewhere in this tortured
century and made to dance until we'd had enough. Dance until we dropped.'' The novel goes on
to imagine the three farmers' wartime experiences and to describe how the strangely arresting
photograph impels both the Detroit museumgoer and a writer in Boston to investigate and
ponder the history surrounding it. Along the way, in passages that would not seem out of place
in a philosophy journal, Powers contemplates the annihilation by World War I of the 19thcentury
''doctrine of perfectibility'' and the repercussions of the ''geometrically accelerating
culture'' of our own ''tortured century,'' which, in his view, creates an illusion of progress and
prosperity amid rampant brutality and dehumanization.

''Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance,'' which appeared when Powers had not yet turned 30,
was nothing less than enthralling in its ambition and promise. In the 13 years since then, he has
published four other novels -- ''Prisoner's Dilemma,'' ''The Gold Bug Variations,'' ''Operation
Wandering Soul'' and ''Galatea 2.2'' -- in which he has continued to explore some of the darker
ironies, absurdities and tragedies of life in the American century. Dense, challenging, aphoristic
and swarming with recondite allusions and puns, these novels display an authoritative grasp of
a breathtaking range of subjects, from architectural history and medieval theology to quantum
physics and popular culture. But while Powers never seems out to impress or obfuscate, his
conspicuous intelligence and virtuosity have also won him a reputation as difficult, even
inaccessible.

His sixth novel, ''Gain,'' seems designed to change all that. Like his earlier books, it is erudite,
penetrating and splendidly written; alongside them, though, it seems positively straightforward.
Powers cuts back and forth between two narratives. One relates the history of a small family
soap-and-candle business, Jephthah Clare & Sons of Boston, which over the course of the 19th
and 20th centuries grows into a giant worldwide conglomerate called Clare International. The
other story, set in the present day, concerns Laura Bodey, a divorced 42-year-old real estate
saleswoman who lives with her son and daughter in Lacewood, Ill., the headquarters of Clare's
North American Agricultural Products Division.

Not long after Laura develops ovarian cancer, she discovers that chemicals from the Clare plant
-- or the Clare-produced fertilizers and weedkillers that she uses in her garden -- may be
responsible. From early on, it's clear what Powers is getting at -- the history of a company like
Clare may add up to a classic American success story, but among the casualties of that supposed
success are the health and happiness of some of its customers and neighbors. The pointed
association of business growth with tumor growth, of a corporation's robust health with a
woman's agonizing infirmity, is deliberate: for Powers, there is a direct link between the rise of
corporations and the decline of the individual, of humane values and of human well-being
generally. The title's irony is hardly subtle: have we gained the whole world, Powers wants to
know, only to lose our souls?

Neither of the novel's parallel narratives contains so much as a single surprising plot
development. Yet the book holds one's interest anyway, mainly because Powers, in the
corporate-history passages, makes a compelling tale out of the evolution of American business
practices over nearly two centuries. The story of Clare, like that of many a real-life American
company, proves to be one of survival and expansion made possible by its management's ability
to adapt to -- or even anticipate -- such changes as the invention of the corporation, the
introduction of packaging and promotion and the advent of multinationals and vertical
integration. Powers's account of how Clare's management acquires a concept of the corporate
image and then consciously strives to establish the corporation as ''a person'' not only ''in the
eyes of the law'' but ''in the minds of its customers'' is perceptive and valuable. Has any novelist
been more successful at bringing the history of American business to life?

And yet, for all his gifts, Powers proves somewhat less successful at animating his characters.
This is true especially of the men and women -- most of them named Clare -- who figure in the
nearly dialogue-free corporate history, but it is also the case with Laura Bodey and her family.
By far the most distinctive attribute of the rather affectless Laura is her bemused, quizzical take
on daily life in millennial America, but her reflections always make her sound less like a middleaged,
Middle American real estate saleswoman than an egghead novelist. If at times this cancerridden
mom and her brand-name-ridden life seem almost to have stepped out of a 1980's short
story by David Leavitt or some other practitioner of Brat Pack minimalism (a subgenre that has
always appeared to be at the opposite end of the literary spectrum from Powers), some of the
digs at modern consumer society that Powers puts in her mouth bring to mind Don DeLillo at
his most facile. (''Remind me again,'' Laura asks her daughter at one point. ''Which is stronger:
Mega, Super or Ultra?'')

Illness only makes Laura more implausible. Though she declines from a vigorous, independent
woman into an utterly debilitated, pain-racked invalid, the tone of her thoughts, as reported by
Powers, remains unwaveringly crisp, clever and sardonic. (Which is, of course, another way of
saying that she continues to function principally as an authorial mouthpiece.) It doesn't add up
to a terribly credible or affecting portrait of a soul in extremis. Powers, alas, seems to have
trouble resisting the urge to reduce people to his ideas about them -- a surprising flaw in a
novelist whose chief theme is the dehumanization of Americans by corporations.

Yet this novel's merits far outweigh its failings. Though the dark underside of American
enterprise and the American dream of material fulfillment have long been standard literary
themes, what Powers has attempted -- and carried off -- here is something quite special. One
can have a pretty fair knowledge of the history of the United States and still experience ''Gain''
almost as a revelation. For to read Powers's story of the shaping of today's commercial culture is
to feel as if one has never before seen that culture quite so clearly or acquired such a vivid
understanding of the dynamic, generations-long process that brought it into being.

THE book abounds in memorable statements summing up the significance of various historical
developments. (With the invention of the telegraph, for example, ''time was dead; things could
be known in the moment they happened.'') And how many writers could, at considerable length,
describe everything that goes into the creation and packaging of a single-use camera and leave a
reader at once awe-struck at the complexity of the process, dismayed that so much should go
into the manufacture of an item designed for almost instant obsolescence and haunted by our
culture's baffling admixture of the miraculous and the banal, of technological sophistication and
moral and spiritual coarseness?

Moreover, Powers so effectively ties chemistry to cancer -- tapping adroitly into Americans'
latent paranoia about the ubiquity of carcinogens -- that by the novel's end many readers may
well find themselves staring in terror at the chemical names on the labels of their household
products. And he so powerfully communicates his sense of the corporate world's tyranny over
the 20th-century American soul that one may almost forget the century's far more monstrous
tyrannies -- which were, of course, vanquished through the efforts and example of the capitalist
democracies. Yet if one may reasonably dispute the novel's implicit politics, there is no
gainsaying the remarkable artistry and authority with which Powers, in this dazzling book,
continues to impart his singular vision of our life and times.
añadido por browner56 | editarThe New York Times, Bruce Bawer (Jun 21, 1998)
 
Never one to tread lightly or think small, Powers (Galatea 2.2, 1995, etc.) here tackles 170 years of US capitalism as embodied by a single corporation, binding it to the struggle of a midwestern mom to a cancer most likely caused by the same company’s malfeasance. The candle-and-soap outfit begun in Boston in the 1830s by the three Clare brothers first built a reputation on its medicinal soap, the secret ingredient of which came from a root given the youngest Clare on a surveying expedition to the South Seas. Prosperity came when the brothers were chosen as a soap supplier to the Army, and diversity followed as the ever-expanding company moved into home, industrial, and agricultural commodities. At the turn of the century, Clare Soap and Chemical chose the sleepy town of Lacewood, Illinois, as the site of its Agricultural Products group. Since then, the fate of the town has been tied tightly to the fate of the multinational corporation. None of this matters to Laura Bodey, a competent, plant-loving single mother of two teenagers whose only links to Clare, Inc., are the homebuyers brought into her realty office as a result of the company’s booming business. After being diagnosed with ovarian cancer, however, she begins to become aware of reports concerning widespread industrial pollution by Lacewood’s corporate benefactor. Surgery and chemotherapy fail to keep the monstrous cancer at bay, but even as she grows weaker Laura resists joining a class-action suit against Clare, refusing to believe that any of the company’s products could have done this to her--until confronted by evidence from her beloved garden. The personal story is wrenching in its detail, and the larger point is amply made, but interest in the corporate history itself, which is not only weighty but a tad dull in the balance, proves harder to sustain. Yet anothttp://www.librarything.com/work/1486091#her unconventional work from Powers, a novelist who never does the same thing twice, but not his strongest.
añadido por browner56 | editarKirkus Review (Jun 1, 1998)
 

» Añade otros autores (1 posible)

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Richard Powersautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Damsma, HarmTraductorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Miedema, NiekTraductorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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Wikipedia en inglés (2)

Gain braids together two stories on very different scales. In one, Laura Body, divorced mother of two and a real-estate agent in the small town of Lacewood, Illinois, plunges into a new existence when she learns that she has ovarian cancer. In the other, Clare & Company, a soap manufacturer begun by three brothers in nineteenth-century Boston, grows over the course of a century and a half into an international consumer products conglomerate based in Laura's hometown. Clare's stunning growth reflects the kaleidoscopic history of America; Laura Body's life is changed forever by Clare. The novel's stunning conclusion reveals the countless invisible connections between the largest enterprises and the smallest lives.

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