Product Details
White Noise (Picador Books)

White Noise (Picador Books)
By Don DeLillo

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5331 in Books
  • Published on: 1986-10-10
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 326 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
Jack Gladney, head of Hitler studies at the College-on-the-Hill, is afraid of death, as is his wife Babette and his colleague Murray who runs a seminar on car crashes. The author exposes our common obsession with mortality, and Jack and Babette's biggest fear - who will die first?


Customer Reviews

Amazingly overated1
This was my introduction to Delillo and it was a huge disapointment, leaving me puzzled as to what people find so brilliant about him. The characters are awful cardboard contructs who nobody could ever care about for a moment. The plot is non-existent. I know, I know, it is a brilliant post modern satire on consumerist society and disaster as spectacle and plot is not the point. But you know what, it is not brilliant abd books do actually need plots or at least stories. Pretty much every theme in it had been dealt with by earlier writers so it felt curiously old fashioned for a mid eighties book. The philosophical musings are half baked and hardly insightful.

Oh and the humour, well, it just isnt funny. Didnt make me laugh anyway. I feel a bit bad slamming an author like this. He did his best no doubt and good luck to him but the critical acclaim is just astonishing.

The final thing that people talk about is his writing - the brilliant phrases and glittering sentences. Well, I will have to say the quality of the writing was what made me grind on for a hundred pages in the hope that something might happen or that the characters might somehow become more engaging and less one dimensional. It was pretty good. Not the prose of genius as it is sometimes described but he turns a neat phrase here and there. And to be ultra fair the idea of Hitler Studies was probably pretty clever in 1984 or so.

But really, who wants to read hundreds of pages of this sort of damp attack on consumerism. The praise heaped on it seems to typify what has gone wrong with literary fiction and the criticism of literature.

Worth a read if you are wanting to strike literary poses, if you want a story worth reading don't bother.

Curate's Egg3
Some nice ideas and some good lines but it just doesn't seem to hang together. Given its frequent comic pretensions it has the major failing of - well - not being very funny. The characterisation is often annoying and frankly it's extremely put-downable.

Love this book...5
This is one of my all time favourite books. Contrary to other reviews, I found this the most accessible of Delillo's fiction. It's a humerous look at the state of modern American culture.

Exposure to an 'airborne toxic event' causes Jack to confront his own mortality and seek out a black market drug called Dylar to allay his fear of death. This book is brimming with witty observations and ridiculous dialogue. The character of Murray is laugh out loud funny. Definitely worth reading!