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The Raw Shark Texts: A Novel by Steven Hall
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Steven Hall Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Original Language); English (Unknown); English (Published) Published: 2008-04-11 ISBN: 1847671748 Number of pages: 448 Publisher: Canongate U.S.
Book Reviews of The Raw Shark Texts: A NovelBook Review: wow, i'm not the only one Summary: 2 StarsAfter reading the many positive reviews on the cover of this book (and fooled into buying it by these reviews and book description), I was scared I would be the only person who didn't particularly care for this novel.
Eric's first encounter with the shark not only caused him to go on a journey, but it was also a first of a chain of "what the hell?" moments for me. I trudged through reading it because...I'm not sure why--I guess I don't want to be accused of being a quitter. I was happy to make my way to the end of the novel, not because I enjoyed the ride but because I wanted it to be over.
I admit I like loose ends being tied up, but I'll allow uncertainties for art's sake. As unsure as the ending is, that didn't bother me. What did bother me was the basic unanswered question: Why did the shark choose Eric as prey? This book was one that changed the rules whenever it was convenient. For example, towards the end Eric is given the task of drinking scraps of paper that have the word "water" written on them. Somehow, the paper turns to water, but I don't recall this being because Eric was finally able to open his mind or because he came to some cosmic revelation...It just happened when it was convenient for the plot. I guess the reader is supposed to accept a literary dimension where word sharks turn into real sharks, but where was this world? In their minds? Some alternate literary dimension? Also, didn't the therapist in the beginng tell Eric that this was something like the eleventh time he'd lost his memory? What happened during the other ten times?
I appreciate Hall for his attempt at something different, and I did enjoy his narrative style: I just never "got" the book. This story would work better as a movie--I only wish I could've finished this book in 90 minutes.
Summary of The Raw Shark Texts: A NovelThe Raw Shark Texts, called "clever, playful . . .? sharp and clear" by the Los Angeles Times and "a horror-dystopic-philosophical mash-up" by the New York Times Magazine, is a novel unlike any other. Eric Sanderson wakes up in a house one day with no idea who or where he is. Instructed by a mysterious note to visit a Dr. Randle, Eric learns that the agony of losing the love of his life in a scuba-diving accident three years before has destroyed his memory. But there may be more to the story, or it may be a different story altogether. As Eric begins to examine letters and papers left in the house by "the first Eric Sanderson," a staggeringly different explanation for what is happening to Eric emerges, and he and the reader embark on a quest to recover the truth and escape the remorseless predatory forces that threatens to devour him. The Raw Shark Texts is a kaleidoscopic novel about the magnitude of love and the devastating effect of losing that love. Amazon Best of the Month, March 2007: Not since Fight Club have a I read a book that sizzled with such fierce originality and searing vision as Steven Hall's electrifying debut novel, The Raw Shark Texts. It's a twisting, trippy thriller that tears through the landscape of language, revealing the lurking terrors uncovered in every letter of the written word. Steven Hall swims in the same surreal waters as pop-culture pioneers David Lynch and Michel Gondry, and The Raw Shark Texts deserves to be shelved somewhere between Trainspotting and Life of Pi. It pulls you under like a riptide, leaving you exhausted, exhilarated, and gasping for air. But don't just take our word for it. We asked Audrey Niffenegger, one of the most creative contemporary writers working today, to share with readers her take on Steven Hall's debut novel, The Raw Shark Texts. Check out her exclusive Amazon guest review below. --Brad Thomas Parsons Guest Reviewer: Audrey Niffenegger Audrey Niffenegger is a professor in the Interdisciplinary Books Arts MFA Program at the Columbia College Chicago Center for Book and Paper Arts. A visual artist, she shows her artwork at Printworks Gallery in Chicago. The Time Traveler's Wife, her first novel, was an international bestseller and was one of Amazon.com's Best Books of 2003. It won several awards and is being made into a major motion picture. Her visual novels, The Three Incestuous Sisters and The Adventuress, were recently published by Harry N. Abrams. Miss Niffenegger is currently hard at work on her second novel, Her Fearful Symmetry, a ghost story set in London's Highgate Cemetery. Eric Sanderson has lost his memory, his girl, his life as he once knew it. His pre-amnesiac self is sending him letters, a sort of correspondence course on how to be Eric Sanderson. Unfortunately, this previous self didn't really have it all together either. This is too bad, because the source of all the trouble is a conceptual shark, a Ludovician shark, no less. Soon Eric is on the run, trying to piece it all together and find true love before his mind gets wiped by the shark for the twelfth and probably final time. Steven Hall is an inventive, funny and extremely smart writer. I am a letterpress printer and a typophile, and I was drawn to his book because of the typography: The Raw Shark Texts is riddled with typographic games, codes, a flip book, and a boatload of very elegant plot devices that hinge on collisions between the Information Age and the imagination. At one point Eric and Scout, his guide/love interest, are speeding away from the conceptual shark on a motorbike. Scout eludes the shark by exploding a letter bomb, a bomb made out of old metal type; the type diverts the shark into a stream of random letterforms. At this I practically fell off the couch with admiration. There's plenty to groove on in The Raw Sharks Texts even if you're not a type maven. There's echoes of Cyberpunk, Borges, Auster; there is adventure on the high seas, lost love, an exploration of what it means to be human in the age of intelligent machines. The Raw Sharks Texts is huge fun, and I gleefully recommend it. --Audrey Niffenegger
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