Specimen Days
|
| Price: |
35 new or used available from £0.01
Average customer review:Product Description
One of the most anticipated novels of 2005 from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Hours. Specimen Days is three linked visionary narratives about the relationship between man and machine. The first narrative, a ghost story set at the height of the Industrial Revolution, tells the story of man-eating machines. An ecstatic boy, barely embodied in the physical world, speaks in the voice of the great visionary poet Walt Whitman. He works at an oppressive factory connected to the making of a mysterious substance with some universal function and on which the world's economy somehow depends. The slight boy can barely operate the massive machine which speaks to him in the voice of his devoured brother. A woman who was to have married the brother is now the object of obsessive interest by the boy. In a city in which all are mastered by the machine, the boy is convinced that the woman must be saved before she too is devoured. This grisly but ultimately transformative story establishes three main characters who will appear, re-incarnated, in the other two sections of this startling modern novel. The boy, the man and the woman are each in search of some sort of transcendence as is made manifest by the recurrence of the words of Whitman ('It avails not, neither distance nor place...I am with you, and know how it is'). In part two, a noir thriller set in the early years of our current century, the city is at threat from maniacal bombers, while the third and last part plays with the sci-fi genre, taking our characters centuries into the future. The man who was devoured by a machine in part one is now literally a machine - a robot who becomes fully human before our eyes. The woman is a refugee from another part of the universe, a warrior in her native land but a servant on this planet. The boy leaves the earth at the novel's close in search of a new-found land. Specimen Days is a genre bending, haunting ode to life itself - a work of surpassing power and beauty by one of the most original and daring writers at work today.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #603882 in Books
- Published on: 2005-08-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 320 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
It's hard to overestimate the impression made by Michael Cunningham's The Hours; this was literary fiction of a rare order, detailing the inner lives of its female protagonists with sympathy and understanding. Now we have Specimen Days, and this has to be counted among the most eagerly anticipated novels in recent years, such is the reputation of the Pulitzer prize-winning novelist has acquired in a relatively short time. And if Specimen Days does not immediately exert the grip of its predecessor, this is due to no failure of technique. Cunningham knows exactly what he is doing, and his slow, penetrating accretion of detail ultimately pays off in ways that are richly satisfying.
The various sections of the novel describe the same group of protagonists: a young boy, a young woman and an older man. But the treatment of these characters is strikingly varied from section to section, and the ambitions of the novel are jaw dropping. In the Machine is set during the industrial revolution, and balances the carefully examined pathology of its characters against supernatural elements. We are then taken to the early 21st century in The Children's Crusade which has a far grittier tone, with a terrorist group setting off bombs at random throughout the city. Finally, we are plunged 150 years into the future, when the city of New York is struggling to deal with the host of refugees from a planet that astronauts have reached.
All of these widely disparate narratives are united by the telling presence of the poet Walt Whitman, who acts as an anchor for the reader in a narrative that disorients as much as it stimulates. Not everyone will be able to accept the massive reach of Cunningham's novel, and the wrench between different time periods is certainly more shocking than that in The Hours. But for those willing to accept the new and challenging, Specimen Days is a masterful and visceral read. --Barry Forshaw
Review
Praise for The Hours: 'The Hours is a book which heightens the perception of the reader. Cunningham's craftmanship is overwhelming.' Robert Farren, Sunday Independent 'An extremely moving, original and memorable novel.' Hermione Lee, TLS 'Engrossing, imaginative and humane.' Richard Francis, Observer 'This chamber piece rhapsodies on creativity and madness, love and loss.' Esquire
Peter Parker, Sunday Times
‘Intricately conceived, stylishly written and admirably ambitious, this absorbing novel lingers in the mind.’
Customer Reviews
Specimen Days, Michael Cunningham
I'm not sure what to really make of this book. The Hours is one of the best novels I've ever read. Specimen Days, then, has a lot to live up to. Cunningham navigates this relatively well by making it a completely different kettle of fish. Even though both novels are told through three separate strands united by common themes, this device works completely differently. Here, each new section adds another level to everything you think you know about the book, and in the end you really don't end up knowing much at all. So ambitious is the whole thing that you never really know where Cunningham is trying to hit. It isn't really very focused (is it about the relationship between man and the machinery he creates? Is it about duty? Is it about love? Is it about family? Is it about the simple act of living? Is it about the natural world, the ravages we put it through? Is it about sacrifice? Is it about fate? Is it about stories? Is it about time/history?) Cunningham passes his lens over so many little knots of meaning, and even though he does devote more time to some than others, there's a sense that he never delves deep enough into any single one.
Really, though, it doesn't matter and I didn't mind. I was quite happy just to be led through and briefly recognise little nuggets of meaning as they tripped past, savouring the relationships Cunningham gives his characters, the writing and the stories. It's not word too long, either, which is nice to see. Most novels nowadays are too long (less is always more; it takes more skill to condense than to expand, and success always gives a more powerful novel). I'm not really sure I'm capable of unwrapping the meaning of the book (if it even has a thread you can pull that will give its "meaning" - or even a few), but what it does do unquestionably is present a series of fascinating ideas and themes.
The verse of Walt Whitman is another recurring theme, and I was a little confounded by it. As a device it is integral to the meaning, but as part of the story it's unnecessary in the extreme, forced and a little self-conscious. I didn't really know what to make of all these characters spouting lines of poetry at random. If this is a "Whitman" book, and "The Hours" is his "Woolf" book, The Hours is far more successful. Though, admittedly, he is using Whitman for a different kind of thing. But the Whitman does see a little out of place at times, even if it does make for a nice way of commenting on relationship between inchoate art and the concrete human world.
Each novella is, individually, very entertaining and very well-written, the interaction between the characters is particularly good. Taken apart, they're very good indeed. Taken together, they are even more rewarding. It's not as good as The Hours, but Specimen Days is, though a bit of an enigma, an unfalteringly interesting and enjoyable book about humanity and its place in the world it has created.
Wonderful
Michael Cunningham is best known as the author of "The Hours," the Pulitzer-Prize winning novel that went on to become an acclaimed movie starring Nicole Kidman as Virginia Wolf, the book's literary muse.
In his latest novel, "Specimen Days," Cunningham once again turns to a long-gone master of words-the great American poet Walt Whitman-for inspiration.
The result is a volume of three interwoven tales, each laced with deliciously fluid lines from Whitman, including two that recur, hauntingly, throughout: "...for every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you" and "...to die is different from what anyone supposed, and luckier."
Throughout the book, characters are obsessed with Walt Whitman, and several quote his prose compulsively while traversing the city of New York over the decades, from the Industrial Revolution to the future. In the first section, the Whitman-obsessed is a deformed child named Luke who works in an ironworks factory and is in love with his dead brother's seamstress fiancé. In the second section (which takes place the present day) the Whitman-quoter is another deformed child, one who has spent his life trapped in an apartment with walls covered in the pages of "Leaves of Grass" and has been raised to be a terrorist. The third section delves into science fiction, with a Whitman-programmed character who is half-human, half-robot, and travels across a radiation-wasted United States with an alien companion.
Readers will be appalled and fascinated at the possibilities raised: Is technology dooming the planet? Will things become even more unsafe for everyday citizens? If we find life on another planet, will we be disappointed?
"Specimen Days" is disturbing, yes, but impossible to give up on, even for the squeamish. Michael Cunningham's imaginative stories are irresistible even when they are nightmarish, and his writing is lyrical and filled with gorgeous imagery and turns of phrase. A wonderful book, but try it for yourself! Pick up a copy. Another book I need to recommend -- very much on my mind since I purchased a "used" copy off Amazon is "The Losers' Club: Complete Restored Edition," an odd, compelling little novel I can't stop thinking about.
-------------------------
"The dead sing to us through machinery"
Michael Cunningham's new novel Specimen Days is a profoundly disturbing and deeply disconcerting meditation on the state of humanity. With it's universal themes of man against the machine, and its vision of a dark, socially fractured, almost hopeless future, the novel takes the reader on a foreboding journey, a bleak ride through three different time periods, each fraught with chaos, unease, and turmoil, and poses a vision of a future society that is far from utopian.
Divided into a triptych of three different stories, Specimen Days transports the reader to New York in the of the 19th century at the height of the industrial revolution, a post 9/11 New York in the 21st century still coping with the terrible machinations of terrorism, and a startling future world, 150 years hence, where New York has been transformed, where society is post-apocalyptic, and where humans, machines, and even the new immigrants - the extraterrestrials - are all living together in an uneasy dance of tolerance.
The stories are connected by the poetry of Walt Whitman and each chapter unfolds as a different genre: ghost story, thriller, and science fiction. Specimen Days also follows three characters, Luke, Simon and Katherine, through almost three hundred years of human history, as they are gradually transformed by the world around them.Their journey is one of self- knowledge, where they must realize that we are "part of something vaster and more marvelous than the living can imagine."
The first story, In The Machine, finds finds Simon, Catherine, and Lucas at the height of the Industrial Revolution. Simon has just died after getting caught in the machine he manned. His 12-year-old brother, Lucas, is left to take on his job to support the family, while Catherine mourns her fiance. Lucas, "a changeling child, goblin-faced with a frail heart and mismatched eyes," steadily becomes more obessessed with the machine, eventually hearing a voice inside it.
Lucas believes that the machinery has somehow devoured Simon and that his brother dwells among its cogs and wheels. But the more he works at the machine, the more he becomes aware of the sound of the machine; it becomes his portal, the window he whispers through, singing the living through the mouth of machine. As he loads the plates onto the best, he realizes that the machines are not inanimate, but that they are part of a continuum and he wonders if machines can lose track of themselves, let their caution lapse so they could take our hands with loving firmness and pull us humans in.
Just as we witness the terrible consequences of Lucas' obsession, we are rushed forwards into the second story. In The Children's Crusade, the terrorest threats to New York have not gone away, and Cat, an "exotic specimen," now a no-nonsense, ultra competent African-American police psycholgist, is racing against time to find a group of children who have become potentional suicide bombers. This section of the novel is a total thrill ride from beginning to end, as a child is witnessed hugging a startled businessman at ground zero then detonating - It's a terrible sign of what is to come.
When Whitman's poetry appears on the wall outside Cat's apartment door, she knows that the machinery of the city, the immense discordant poetry of the city is being rocked along its filaments. While she tries to hunt down the killers, Kat, disillusioned and wracked with worry, ponders the whole struggle between order and chaos and she realizes that it has no beauty to it, no philosophy or poetry, "in a world where death itself feels cheap and easy." In Kat's New York, no one is safe, not even mothers," not even the people who are willing to sacrifice everything in the name of love."
In Like Beauty, the final section - and perhaps the least successful - the results of our first contact with alien life are described. Set about 150 years in the future, the world is now a vastly different place, There has been some kind of nuclear meltdown, we now share the planet with aliens, refugees from the planet Nadia, and Simon is now an an artificial human implanted with verses from Whitman.
Kat is now Catareen and is "a four-and-a-half-foot-tall lizard with prominent nostrils and eyes slightly smaller than golf balls." Escaping the wrath of the newly elected Chistian council, Catareen and Simon escape New York for Denver, where Simon tries to find the elusive "beauty" that has been missing from his life. Simon and Catareen eventually establish some kind of connection, even though they couldn't be more different. In their way, they are as alive as any two humans, "as any two leaves of grass." But as Simon grows to care for Catareen, he is in danger of sacrificing his future, much as the original Simon sacrificed his life to the machine.
As the lives of Katherine, Luke, and Simon gradually unfold, the story keeps re-telling itself with various themes and ideas linking the parts together. There's the New York setting, physical deformity, the death of a central character, mismatched lovers, the purchase of a bowl, June 21st, and the poetry of Walt Whitman, which is constantly embeded and instilled so reverently in the narrative.
Cunningham is dealing with some big isses here. Obviously life, death, and the human continuum are central themes of Specimen Days, but the author is also interested in exploring where humanity's often uneasy relationship with technology, terrorism, and the fully mechanized world will go. Like Whitman, Cunningham believes that we are part of something vaster and more marvelous than the living can imagine, maybe it's some kind of spiritual plane where God is perhaps a holy "machine" that loves us so fiercely, so perfectly, that "he devours us, all of us." Mike Leonard July 05.




