ChatterBank3 mins ago
Brazzaville Beach - William Boyd
2 Answers
Has anyone read this book? I have and so has a friend and we are both at a loss to understand what it was about!
It seemed to be just a long rambling narrative about someone's life, without any particular beginning/middle/end or point.
Have we both missed a cunning sub-text?
It seemed to be just a long rambling narrative about someone's life, without any particular beginning/middle/end or point.
Have we both missed a cunning sub-text?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by EcclesCake. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Have just read some of the blurb. One reader said:
"This is probably one of the best books William Boyd has ever written. One of his greatest strengths as a writer is never patronising his audience or stooping to the lowest common denominator. You get sucked into the cleverly interwoven storylines, each of which are immensely believable and true to life. Characters are fleshed out and environments carefully portrayed down to the finest detail.
Boyd uses the chimpanzee metaphor to perfection. Everyone will draw parallels between the demise of Hope & John's relationship and the degeneration of the tribe into anarchy. Of course, there is one powerful overriding argument emanating from this fine book: the implication that
1. The chimps display extremely tribal behaviour at Grosso Arvore, and are capable of murder to defend their hierarchy
2. We are evolutionarily related to chimps
3. To murder is not inhuman
Doesn't sound my cup of tea.
"This is probably one of the best books William Boyd has ever written. One of his greatest strengths as a writer is never patronising his audience or stooping to the lowest common denominator. You get sucked into the cleverly interwoven storylines, each of which are immensely believable and true to life. Characters are fleshed out and environments carefully portrayed down to the finest detail.
Boyd uses the chimpanzee metaphor to perfection. Everyone will draw parallels between the demise of Hope & John's relationship and the degeneration of the tribe into anarchy. Of course, there is one powerful overriding argument emanating from this fine book: the implication that
1. The chimps display extremely tribal behaviour at Grosso Arvore, and are capable of murder to defend their hierarchy
2. We are evolutionarily related to chimps
3. To murder is not inhuman
Doesn't sound my cup of tea.
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