Customer Reviews for

The Possibility of an Island

Average Rating 4
( 5 )
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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 3, 2006

    Go figure

    I think every book Houllebecq writes is brilliant. The problem is Houllebecq the man ruins it. He sounds like the old-fashioned male chauvinist pig who got deconstructed and eviscerated by those 60's feminists years ago. I thought this type of man had become obsolete - what was he like as a teenage boy, I wonder - probably with acne, painfully shy, watched a lot of porn. There's a French pubescent boy here along with an impotent adult man's desperate sexual wish fulfillments. Added to this mix is the classic male chauvinist's corrosive misogyny. But as I said, the book is brilliant. So go figure.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted December 9, 2008

    more from this reviewer

    This is a strange insightful look at what is humanity from various angles

    Now fortyish Daniel built a lucrative career on commercializing his bad taste as a clown who enjoyed the absurd western ideology of evil. He created standup comedy sketches, films and rap records. Once e was wealthy, Daniel and his wife Isabelle chose to escape the stupid malevolent society by moving to a remote estate in Spain. When the couple learns that life is nasty as Isabel falls victim to the droop, their marriage dies.--------------- Daniel joins the Elohim, a sect that seeks immortality through sexual indulgence and artificial human life. However that does not pump up Daniel as much as meeting the much younger virile Esther, whose sex drive is astronomical (perhaps the age difference make sit seem that way). They fall in love, but he can¿t keep it up with her so it ends leaving him despondent with thoughts of is that all there is as he considers suicide. Two millenniums into the future, neohuman clones of Daniel and others including his dog Fox live at the state courtesy of Elohim's success even as the mutant survivors of nuclear disasters and the Great Dry Up die just outside the compound.------------- This is a strange insightful look at what is humanity from various angles. The story line rotates chapters between the ¿present¿ and the future¿ though the latter are small insets. Daniel is a fascinating protagonist as he struggles with the fact that once you are born dying begins, which in middle age is speeded up by biological deterioration. Though at times the philosophy of humanity equates to death overwhelms the action, fans of thought provoking contemporary character study and futuristic science fiction will appreciate this effusive pessimistic glimpse at what is mankind.------------ Harriet Klausner

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 21, 2009

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 6, 2009

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 1, 2012

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