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The Notable Brain of Maximilian Ponder par…
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The Notable Brain of Maximilian Ponder (édition 2012)

par J. W. Ironmonger

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'Maximilian Ponder is lying face up, dead, on the dining table in his own front room. This is something you really should know, right from the start. Max would also have wanted you to know that this is a Henri II style, French, walnut extending dining table, standing on solid turned legs with fretwork decor to the middle, also with ebony and sandalwood inlay, designed by the French furniture maker Nicolas Rastin and probably dating from around 1900...' Maximilian Ponder shut himself away for thirty years in an attempt to record every memory he ever had. Now he lies dead, surrounded by his magnum opus - The Catalogue - an exhaustive set of notebooks and journals that he hopes will form the map of one human mind. But before his friend Adam Last can call the police and inform them of Max's death, one rather gruesome task remains in order for Max's project to be complete. Interspersed with sections from The Catalogue, Adam tells the story of the man he knew - a man whose life changed dramatically the day he buried a dead labrador and fought a duel with his father. What emerges is both the story of a friendship, and also of a lifelong obsession, a quest to understand the human mind, memory, and what constitutes a life.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:heterotopic
Titre:The Notable Brain of Maximilian Ponder
Auteurs:J. W. Ironmonger
Info:Orion Publishing Group (2012), Paperback
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, En cours de lecture
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Mots-clés:page 80

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The Notable Brain of Maximilian Ponder par J. W. Ironmonger

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» Voir aussi les 2 mentions

4 sur 4
I read 'Not Forgetting the Whale' by this author a few weeks ago and really enjoyed it so thought I'd give one of his other books a go.

It's an unusual book, with a very interesting premise. I agree with other people's opinions that it seemed a little drawn out at times, there were extracts from Max's diaries that didn't really seem to have anything to do with anything, but they were still quite readable. The ending of the book was the best part as it dealt with something very real and it was well written. It has some interesting discussion about memories though, and how much is actually forgotten. ( )
  Triduana | Jan 25, 2022 |
This reminded me of the story Funes the Memorious by Borges. it relates in a similar way to the nightmare of remembering every experience. Unlike Funes Ponder wants to preserve every experience. But in both cases the consequences make ordinary existence impossible. The effect here is melancholic as the narrative jumps convey a powerful sense of time's destructive potential. ( )
  Jeffrey_Towey | Dec 28, 2019 |
Enjoyable if at times annoying. Ultimately I don't understand why the crime was committed, in the end there was no need for it but the overall narrative is very good and a bit different from anything else I've ever read. ( )
  sundowneruk | Feb 2, 2016 |
Maximillian Ponder has locked himself away in the family seat for thirty years with no phone, radio or television. His personal clock stopped in 1975, his only link to the world beyond his walls is his childhood – and only - friend Adam Last and Adam is duty bound never to mention anything that is happening in the present, because that would pollute the state of Max’s brain on the day he began his grand project: the cataloguing of his memories; all the information in his brain, up to and including the day he shut himself away.

It could have been rather dry. It’s not. It is a collection of stories about life and how it feels to be alive; a remarkably woven tapestry of past and present and how events impacted two men - Adam and Max, who met as children in colonial Africa, their lives inextricably entwined because of Max’s project – a life’s work that only Adam truly understands.

Max’s diary entries contrast with Adam’s own memories, and Adam’s thoughts sit alongside Max’s musings and all the characters – Max and Adam, their families and friends and the people they knew, like Max’s father’s friend Idi Amin – are wonderfully real. Turning points in history sit alongside simple stories of the everyday and everything is stitched together with the strange, sad story of Max Ponder. The African chapters in particular, are exceptional. The writing is consistently superb, touching and sad and detailed by turns, rich in detail but never laboured; constantly entertaining, readable and quite remarkable. ( )
1 voter MayaP | Jun 16, 2012 |
4 sur 4
There are equally successful moments of comedy and affection. Ironmonger makes a virtue of the absurdity of Max and his endeavour, while always treating him sympathetically.
ajouté par SimoneA | modifierThe Guardian, Sam Jordison (Aug 22, 2012)
 
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'Maximilian Ponder is lying face up, dead, on the dining table in his own front room. This is something you really should know, right from the start. Max would also have wanted you to know that this is a Henri II style, French, walnut extending dining table, standing on solid turned legs with fretwork decor to the middle, also with ebony and sandalwood inlay, designed by the French furniture maker Nicolas Rastin and probably dating from around 1900...' Maximilian Ponder shut himself away for thirty years in an attempt to record every memory he ever had. Now he lies dead, surrounded by his magnum opus - The Catalogue - an exhaustive set of notebooks and journals that he hopes will form the map of one human mind. But before his friend Adam Last can call the police and inform them of Max's death, one rather gruesome task remains in order for Max's project to be complete. Interspersed with sections from The Catalogue, Adam tells the story of the man he knew - a man whose life changed dramatically the day he buried a dead labrador and fought a duel with his father. What emerges is both the story of a friendship, and also of a lifelong obsession, a quest to understand the human mind, memory, and what constitutes a life.

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