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I'll have to look for it at the library. *NM* Missa Sedai Send a noteboard - 30/08/2009 03:20:16 PM
<img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51czrAvi2CL._SL500_AA240_.jpg" alt="Image of The Gone-Away World" class="right" />There are some books, a very few books, that completely take you over. After a book like that you have no desire to read anything else; you want to reread it for the rest of your life. Given time, friends and family will make you see that this is not the best option (say, that maybe you should focus on your work, or that there might be other good books out there only waiting to be discovered). In the meantime, you will lend it to random people in the street (after having bought an extra copy specifically for lending, as dirty strangers cannot be allowed to touch your glorious copy), buy it for your friends and glare at those who do not take your advice. These books show up very rarely, and they are hardly ever announced.

I had never heard of The Gone-Away World until Ben lent it to me. I wasn't expecting it to be very good, but after having read snatches of Master Wu's attempt at explaining why America beat China to the space program, he managed to convince me that at least the language was good. I consented to putting it on my list. Remind me to buy Ben a very nice Christmas present.

I confess I was worried at first. The opening chapter, while well written, did not particularly appeal to my preferences for what a book should be about. They talked about trucks and guns. There were moments of glory in between, but I was very worried about what this would turn into. And then I read on. It quickly became apparent that the author had a good grasp of not only ninjas and pirates and martial arts, but also characters and plot. And language.

Now, mind you don't misunderstand. When I speak of ninjas and pirates, suggest old men with qi and a generally well-written book, I am not talking about something written by a pretentious geek with a good grasp of internet subcultures and a penchant for ornamental language. Good language in this instance is not the flowery verbal tapestry that I will admit sometimes enraptures certain students of literature (and I am by no means excluding myself). That kind of language would have been entirely out of place. When I say good language, I mean that the words generally are just where they ought to be. Think Adams and Pratchett and Wodehouse, but without thinking Adams and Pratchett and Wodehouse at all. Nick Harkaway has that control over language, but he uses it very differently. It appears as purposefully careless, littered with moments of brilliant insight.

What is it about? I don't really want to tell you. I suspect that is because I started out knowing nothing and fell so head over heels; the entire reading process can probably be imagined as one very slow topple, ending with a very sizeable crash (face hitting floor) in the end (did you follow that metaphor?). It tells the story of Gonzo's friend and Gonzo, set in a post-apocalyptic world (with rather long periods of pre-apocalypse and the apocalypse itself). It provides a commentary on modern warfare, multinational companies, international politics and people as cogs in a larger machinery, or not. All this is fed a steady stream of ninjas, pirates, mimes, revolutionaries, contra-revolutionaries, bastards, bigger bastards, bees, a new and rather unexpected use of Tupperware, and details that pretend to mean nothing, but that lie all the while before hitting you over the head.

I did not get hooked until the second chapter. It starts in medias res, and Harkaway's characters (oh, the characters!) grow and develop throughout -- it therefore stands to reason that they cannot be at their best in the very first chapter. I found it disorienting, as it placed me very unprepared in an unknown world with groups whose motivations and backgrounds were a big mystery. It made me think it was just another book about tough men in a post-apocalyptic tough world. But I have never been very good at reading first chapters. And it is a chapter which makes sense later on. I have also talked to some who found it captured their imagination. In other words: if you find the book sucks you in at once, read on; if it doesn't, read on.

One word on the characters before I go on. I said they develop. They also stand out. Harkaway has a knack that you find in Dumas and Conan Doyle. He gives you people in his supporting cast. Anyone who does not love Master Wu and his soft style gong fu has no heart. Anyone who has ever trained any martial art (certainly soft style --I'll wager my first-born) will feel an extreme need to pick it up again.

The novel has a steady, insistent protest against homogenising; it celebrates the unassimilated, what sticks out, is different, impedes the smooth running of the machinery, what creates something new by breaking down the old. Walter Benjamin would call him an allegorist. I am not sure that is not as good a name (and praise) as any. I could go on. But this is not the place for analysis. It is a well-written book with excellent characters and marvellous moments. It scared me on several levels, but I also laughed out loud rather a lot. And I kept reading snatches to the people around me who had no idea what I was on about.

In concusion: Camilla says, Run! Buy! Read! Now!

~ Missa

*MySmiley*

Always remembering Vegas

"Those were the days my friends, we thought they'd never end. We'd sing and dance forever and a day..."
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The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 29/08/2009 09:24:51 PM 5684 Views
I will read it. - 30/08/2009 10:42:34 AM 1428 Views
Re: I will read it. - 30/08/2009 02:53:25 PM 1522 Views
Re: I will read it. - 30/08/2009 02:58:28 PM 1553 Views
I'll have to look for it at the library. *NM* - 30/08/2009 03:20:16 PM 763 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 31/08/2009 02:47:09 AM 1621 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 31/08/2009 09:53:05 AM 1514 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 31/08/2009 12:35:09 PM 1552 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 31/08/2009 12:44:53 PM 1567 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 31/08/2009 01:57:27 PM 1520 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 31/08/2009 01:58:32 PM 1639 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 01/09/2009 07:05:39 AM 1459 Views
Re: The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway - 21/11/2009 11:15:20 AM 1520 Views
It was a Very Good Book. - 01/09/2009 03:57:31 PM 1503 Views
Yes - 05/09/2009 04:37:55 PM 1389 Views
sounds interesting - 20/10/2009 09:29:55 PM 1381 Views
It is! - 20/10/2009 09:32:31 PM 1388 Views
I just got it. - 20/10/2009 11:37:20 PM 1361 Views
Excellent - 20/10/2009 11:38:57 PM 1486 Views
Well, then, I expect nothing but excellence - 21/10/2009 04:34:24 PM 1488 Views
Let me know what you think of it - 21/10/2009 04:35:57 PM 1511 Views
Absolutely - 21/10/2009 04:53:12 PM 1598 Views
Seems it's a good thing that your review keeps popping up inexplicably. - 20/10/2009 11:41:09 PM 1517 Views
Is that what it does? - 21/10/2009 10:04:10 AM 1446 Views
Having read it now... - 29/10/2009 09:49:38 AM 1482 Views
I am glad you liked it. - 21/11/2009 11:14:51 AM 1353 Views
So it took me a while to even notice this book existed.... - 20/03/2012 09:31:14 PM 1441 Views
Welcome to the club *NM* - 20/03/2012 09:33:22 PM 695 Views
Also - 20/03/2012 09:35:59 PM 1577 Views
It's been bought! - 20/03/2012 09:46:09 PM 1345 Views

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