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Réussir (1978)

par Martin Amis

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

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726731,205 (3.41)33
InSuccessAmis pens a mismatched pair of foster brothers--one "a quivering condom of neurosis and ineptitude," the other a "bundle of contempt, vanity and stock-response"--in a single London flat. He binds them with ties of class hatred, sexual rivalry, and disappointed love, and throws in a disloyal girlfriend and a spectacularly unstable sister to create a modern-day Jacobean revenge comedy that soars with malicious poetry. From the Trade Paperback edition.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 33 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 7 (suivant | tout afficher)
My first read of Martin Amis, so I have little context to work with. This reminds me of Richard Yates. It's not a pretty book. Terrence is adopted into Gregory's family in his early teens after his father kills his sister. Well Gregory's family is pretty screwball too. There's no nobility to be found here. Sordid, bleak. The writing is quite masterful though. The book is a chapter per month, half of each chapter a monologue of Terrence, the other half of Gregory. The different perspectives play off of each other and shift as the months pass. The upper- vs. lower-class distinction is a constant theme. I've sort of straddled that divide myself over the years in various situations, so that part of the book felt very real. There is also a kind of parallel drawn, the shifting power dynamic between Terrence and Gregory as a mirror of the wider shift in society. Was there a wider shift in society? This would be 1970s Great Britain. Darned if I know! ( )
1 voter kukulaj | May 18, 2020 |
However strongly you may hope to find something redeeming in a protagonist, it’s not strong enough to find something redeeming here. A horrific cesspool of misogyny, racism, xenophobia, and antisemitism, with truly truly trigger-warning worthy, nightmare-stirring, scenes of rape, incest, and brutality.

If I never read of another man who is convinced that Womankind (or as Terry or Gregory might call us, c—-s and bitches) has conspired to never let him fuck again, it will be far too soon.
  HeatherWhitney | Apr 25, 2019 |
Success is a possum of a novel. Let me be specific, I don't mean a cute animated creature hamming along with a William Shatner voiceover: Rosebud. I mean the feral variety. Years ago I was leaving a cafe with some friends and turning on the headlights I was startled by a snarling possum glaring at me, threatening me with an ever painful and likely lethal gnawing. I am often bothered by that memory.

Amis bares his teeth in this one, a fifty-fifty approach to diverting fortunes. The narrative begins in a tone of excess, every action is hypertrophied beyond satire. There was a need to brace for impact. I became sad that I was going to hate this book. Then it abruptly congealed. The two characters Terry and Gregory changed orbits in that terrifying street scene of an early 1970s London. The novel screamed to its conclusion . There was a pause, I was nearly breathless. Amis brings a smirk to every page as well as our assured doom. I tend to think he means it.
( )
  jonfaith | Feb 22, 2019 |
I hated this book. I could appreciate the quality of the writing and I'm definitely not one of those readers who has to "like" the characters in order to enjoy a novel. The two main characters, who are foster brothers and roommates (set in early 1970s), take turns narrating from a first-person POV and they address the reader as a witness to their tale. I liked the approach. But I just didn't care about either of them; their story wasn't compelling enough to override the hyper-adolescent-male obsession with getting laid and the accompanying extreme objectification of women (Gregory says about women "silly things, what do they think they are here for if not that?" -- meaning, for him to fuck -- and I use that word intentionally, as do Gregory and Terry. Repeatedly.). Life is too short to read things that outrage me without giving me something back.

I admit to not finishing it, so it may not be fair to rate it, but I'm doing so anyway. And I had to write something about my experience reading it. ( )
3 voter EBT1002 | May 17, 2015 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 7 (suivant | tout afficher)
"After Martin Amis' Success...sibling rivalry seems almost as popular as sexual warfare, fictionally speaking."
ajouté par GYKM | modifierThe Observer, Hermione Lee (Nov 26, 1978)
 
"a moral homily from which all traces of morality have been removed with the brisk surgery of a razor blade on a fingernail...Success is a terrifying, painfully funny, Swiftian exercise in moral disgust; its exhilarating unpleasantness puts it alongside 'A Modest Proposal.'"
ajouté par GYKM | modifierThe Observer, Anthony Thwaite (Apr 16, 1978)
 
"artfully appropriate...[it] builds up an air of profound unreliabiity—entirely fitting, since things are by no means what they seem."
ajouté par GYKM | modifierThe Guardian, Norman Shrapnel (Apr 13, 1978)
 

» Ajouter d'autres auteur(e)s (2 possibles)

Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Martin Amisauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Silva, HéctorTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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(i) It seems that I've lost all the things that used to be nice about me -- TERRY
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InSuccessAmis pens a mismatched pair of foster brothers--one "a quivering condom of neurosis and ineptitude," the other a "bundle of contempt, vanity and stock-response"--in a single London flat. He binds them with ties of class hatred, sexual rivalry, and disappointed love, and throws in a disloyal girlfriend and a spectacularly unstable sister to create a modern-day Jacobean revenge comedy that soars with malicious poetry. From the Trade Paperback edition.

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