Photo de l'auteur

Naomi Alderman

Auteur de The Power

14+ oeuvres 6,713 utilisateurs 323 critiques 5 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Naomi Alderman, Naomi A. Alderman

Crédit image: Photograph by Jerry Bauer

Œuvres de Naomi Alderman

The Power (2016) 4,822 exemplaires
Disobedience (2006) 725 exemplaires
The Future (2023) 351 exemplaires
The Liars' Gospel (2013) 258 exemplaires
Mauvais genre (2010) 219 exemplaires
Doctor Who : Temps d'emprunt (2011) 213 exemplaires
Doctor Who: 13 Doctors, 13 Stories (2019) — Contributeur — 52 exemplaires
Carsten Höller: Decision (2015) 5 exemplaires
Doctor Who: Time Lapse 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

War for the Oaks (1987) — Introduction, quelques éditions2,675 exemplaires
We Who Are About To . . . (1975) — Introduction, quelques éditions584 exemplaires
Marple: Twelve New Stories (2022) — Contributeur — 517 exemplaires
The Heads of Cerberus (1919) — Introduction, quelques éditions83 exemplaires
Horror Stories (Penguin Worlds) (2016) — Introduction — 38 exemplaires
Jews vs Aliens (2015) — Contributeur — 19 exemplaires
Beneath the Skin: Great Writers on the Body (2018) — Contributeur — 15 exemplaires
A Cage Went in Search of a Bird: Ten Kafkaesque Stories (2024) — Contributeur — 9 exemplaires
x-24: unclassified (2007) — Contributeur — 6 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Membres

Discussions

The Power by Naomi Alderman à Dystopian novels (Août 2019)

Critiques

As a small woman, I can't remember the last time I was out in public without at least some baseline level of apprehension for my safety. I'm not walking around constantly terrified by any means, but I am just always aware that there's the possibility that I could be anything from verbally harassed to followed to grabbed. Most of my female friends feel the same way. It's just what it means to be a woman in the world. Naomi Alderman's The Power, though, imagines a different world entirely. It begins in the world as it exists, but there's a sudden change: women have developed an organ that generates electricity inside them, electricity they can shoot out through their hands. In a matter of weeks, the world goes from one in which men are the most powerful, physically and otherwise, to one where that balance isn't the same anymore. The Power changes everything.

Alderman explores this new world through four people: Roxy, the daughter of a British crime boss, whose Power is exceptionally strong; Allie, an abused teenage foster child who turns the voice she hears in her head into a new religious movement; Margot, an ambitious politician; and Tunde, the only man, a Nigerian journalist chronicling the changes in the world since the Power emerged. There's chaos, initially. No one knows what to do, what it all means. But things change quickly, all the way from men needing to learn how to protect themselves against violent women, to women dominating the military, to women toppling oppressive regimes. Eventually the storylines all converge in a fictional Eastern bloc country, now ruled by a woman as a dictator, that's the center of a proxy war between the powers-that-be in the old world against those of the new.

This is a fascinating idea to consider, how the world would change if something like what Alderman describes happens. And I think the failure of the book (as you can see from my rating, I didn't think it was especially good) comes from trying to capture too much. Roxy and Allie's perspectives dominate the book, and while I understand why Alderman included Tunde, to give an idea of what it would be like to come of age as a man in the world as we know it and live through the way it changes, I think Margot's storyline was weak and could have been cut to develop Tunde better. There's some good characterization going on with Roxy and Allie (particularly the former), but it's inconsistent, and it seems almost like Alderman was so excited to really dig into what she thought might happen in her new world that she didn't really think about the people who would be living in it beyond broad strokes.

That being said, it's an effective exploration of the way that power corrupts. At first, many women lash out at men in revenge for the ways they themselves have been hurt, which is an understandable reaction. The reader expects it to settle down after a while, after some wrongs have been righted, but it doesn't. Women begin to objectify the men around them, use their superior position to commit emotional and physical violence against them. While it's easy, living in the world we do live in, to imagine that women would wield large-scale power more effectively and humanely than men have and do, Alderman punches through that fantasy by remembering that women are, after all, human, and human beings do not have a great track record when it comes to the way we mistreat each other when given the opportunity to do so. I do think that as a novel, there are significant weaknesses, but as a piece to engage with intellectually, there's a lot to think and talk about here.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ghneumann | 250 autres critiques | Jun 14, 2024 |
DNF at 50%. This apocalyptic saga has all the ingredients for a riveting read. Conniving tech industry billionaires. Cults. Gritty survivalists. Timely themes that include an exploration of the perils of artificial intelligence and other technological advances from multiple perspectives. Yet it simply didn’t come together for me. I’ve written before that perhaps I’ve overdosed on dystopian tomes. This could be part of the problem. Having said that, I agree with other reviewers who have cited the book’s slow pacing, an excessively long list of characters — some of which are expendable — and an ambitious roster of pressing societal issues that could have been presented in a more cohesive and engaging narrative. Four stars for creativity. One star for overall execution.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
brianinbuffalo | 15 autres critiques | Jun 10, 2024 |
I was not really enjoying this until it got to the epilogue, which kinda blew my mind.
 
Signalé
bookwyrmm | 250 autres critiques | May 25, 2024 |
Set in an alternate universe, this book is produced by the Ministry of Recovery, set in the UK, where a Zombie virus has reduced the population drastically. I like the idea. The case studies between tell the stories of survivors, but the majority of the book is how to exercise, and survival and combat skills, including the best way to kill and dispose of zombies. Fun book for Zombie fans!
 
Signalé
AChild | 2 autres critiques | Apr 11, 2024 |

Listes

Prix et récompenses

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Derek Landy Contributor
Alex Scarrow Contributor
Patrick Ness Contributor
Richelle Mead Contributor
Neil Gaiman Contributor
Eoin Colfer Contributor
Malorie Blackman Contributor
Holly Black Contributor
Charlie Higson Contributor
Philip Reeve Contributor
Marcus Sedgwick Contributor
Michael Scott Contributor
Ralph Rugoff Foreword
Philip Nightingale Narrator, Performer
Adjoa Andoh Narrator
Silvia Bre Translator
Emma Fenney Narrator
Justine Stoddard Photographer
Thomas Judd Narrator
Nathan Burton Cover designer
Marianna Kurtto KääNtäJä.
Sabine Thiele Translator
Rachel Atkins Narrator
Meera Syal Narrator
Joshua Manning Performer
Matt Wieteska Director
Liz Jadav Performer

Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Aussi par
10
Membres
6,713
Popularité
#3,649
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
323
ISBN
157
Langues
15
Favoris
5

Tableaux et graphiques