


Buy The Flamethrowers: A Novel by Kushner, Rachel online on desertcart.ae at best prices. ✓ Fast and free shipping ✓ free returns ✓ cash on delivery available on eligible purchase. Review: 本は新品だったはずですが、赤いマジックで外装にチェックマークのようなものが書かれていたり、表紙が少し破けていたりしていました。海外から取り寄せだったから、多少は仕方ないかな、とは思いますが、満足度は低いですね。 Review: It is impossible to read either The Flamethrowers or Telex from Cuba, Rachel Kushner's first novel, and not notice the unique, brilliant and at times almost poetic descriptive prose that helps set her writing apart. The images Kushner conjures up with her prose are far more vivid than any photos could ever be, often giving the reader the feeling that they have stepped inside the story. She is able to do this by being a great writer, by noticing everything - nothing escapes her gaze - and by writing about what she knows and what she loves, or at least enjoys. And Kushner always writes as though she's been around the block. Several times, in fact. While her brilliant prose steals the show, Kushner has other arrows in her quiver, however; the main characters are well drawn and believable, and the story lines of her historical fiction are always interesting, often compelling, and sometimes humorous. Reno, the female protagonist in The Flamethrowers, seems to go through life letting life happen to her, rather than orchestrating or seizing it. Somehow, despite her passivity, she manages to be an interesting character herself, in part because she often finds herself in the middle of some rather significant events, and is generally surrounded by fascinating characters who are active participants in their own lives. It's almost as though Reno is the lead character in The Perils of Pauline, waltzing through all kinds of chaos and calamity occurring around her, only to emerge mostly unscathed from it all. Reno rides a motorcycle, but the characters she latches onto - including a somewhat shady lover who seems to drift into and out of her life - are what propel her along. The novel - a sort of historical fiction based loosely on some disparate actual events - moves through various locations and periods that somehow become interwoven into whole cloth by the novel's end. The reader time-travels from a brief, long-ago, far-away war scene to the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, and then to the New York art scene of the mid-1970s, where she meets the younger son of an Italian motorcycle manufacturer. They become lovers. From there, she goes back to Bonneville for a land speed record attempt. Don't depart yet; the journey has just begun. You're about to travel to the motorcycle factory in Italy, and then back in time to a Brazilian rubber plantation that furnishes some of the raw material used in making tires, and then back to Italy, before going back in time again. A revolt breaks out in Italy, and after getting caught up in the revolt and hanging out with some activists trying to avoid the police, Reno makes her way out of the country, eventually ending up back in New York, sadder but wiser than when she left. Somehow, it all works, with that brilliant descriptive prose painting a vivid, often gritty picture throughout. Bravo.
| Best Sellers Rank | #381,199 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #12,889 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction #22,025 in Literary Fiction #38,571 in Genre Fiction |
| Customer reviews | 3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars (191) |
| Dimensions | 13.34 x 2.54 x 20.32 cm |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 1439142017 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1439142011 |
| Item weight | 1.05 Kilograms |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 432 pages |
| Publication date | 14 January 2014 |
| Publisher | Scribner |
A**ー
本は新品だったはずですが、赤いマジックで外装にチェックマークのようなものが書かれていたり、表紙が少し破けていたりしていました。海外から取り寄せだったから、多少は仕方ないかな、とは思いますが、満足度は低いですね。
G**D
It is impossible to read either The Flamethrowers or Telex from Cuba, Rachel Kushner's first novel, and not notice the unique, brilliant and at times almost poetic descriptive prose that helps set her writing apart. The images Kushner conjures up with her prose are far more vivid than any photos could ever be, often giving the reader the feeling that they have stepped inside the story. She is able to do this by being a great writer, by noticing everything - nothing escapes her gaze - and by writing about what she knows and what she loves, or at least enjoys. And Kushner always writes as though she's been around the block. Several times, in fact. While her brilliant prose steals the show, Kushner has other arrows in her quiver, however; the main characters are well drawn and believable, and the story lines of her historical fiction are always interesting, often compelling, and sometimes humorous. Reno, the female protagonist in The Flamethrowers, seems to go through life letting life happen to her, rather than orchestrating or seizing it. Somehow, despite her passivity, she manages to be an interesting character herself, in part because she often finds herself in the middle of some rather significant events, and is generally surrounded by fascinating characters who are active participants in their own lives. It's almost as though Reno is the lead character in The Perils of Pauline, waltzing through all kinds of chaos and calamity occurring around her, only to emerge mostly unscathed from it all. Reno rides a motorcycle, but the characters she latches onto - including a somewhat shady lover who seems to drift into and out of her life - are what propel her along. The novel - a sort of historical fiction based loosely on some disparate actual events - moves through various locations and periods that somehow become interwoven into whole cloth by the novel's end. The reader time-travels from a brief, long-ago, far-away war scene to the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, and then to the New York art scene of the mid-1970s, where she meets the younger son of an Italian motorcycle manufacturer. They become lovers. From there, she goes back to Bonneville for a land speed record attempt. Don't depart yet; the journey has just begun. You're about to travel to the motorcycle factory in Italy, and then back in time to a Brazilian rubber plantation that furnishes some of the raw material used in making tires, and then back to Italy, before going back in time again. A revolt breaks out in Italy, and after getting caught up in the revolt and hanging out with some activists trying to avoid the police, Reno makes her way out of the country, eventually ending up back in New York, sadder but wiser than when she left. Somehow, it all works, with that brilliant descriptive prose painting a vivid, often gritty picture throughout. Bravo.
G**H
This novel has had a lot of hype around it, but it really does deserve it. It is superbly written, and Kushner is skilled at evoking both time and place. The characterization is particularly skillful; the reader is drawn in to the lives of the main characters, and a level of interest is maintained through their auras of mystery. The plot is tight and exciting with just the right amount of tension. I had never heard of Rachel Kushner before reading this book, but I have already purchased her first novel on the strength of the writing in this one. An afternoon on the couch with this great novel is time well spent. Enjoy!
F**Z
alles bestens
S**L
This novel is very well written, quite original, has an interesting plot that held my interest, and great main character (I'm always happy to find interesting young women characters these day, who have interesting, adventurous lives, and are interested in more that just falling in love!), and is so well written that it's a pleasure to read. Very intelligent, interesting characters, who drew me in and made me care about what happened to them. I was also quite impressed with the portrayal of the 1970s art "scene" in New York, because I was there and remember it very well, and this writer gets it so well -- it really made me remember the atmosphere of those times, the air of experimentation and the way it seemed that anything was possible on any given day. Life was still full of surprises. It's a pleasure to read something that not only has an involving, interesting story, but is beautifully written. The author takes risks, in her novelistic choices, which means that not every part of the book was equally exciting. But I respected her very much -- she takes the reader on an interesting, unusual "journey." There are few, if any, cliches here. And the main character is complex, original, makes you care about what might happen to her. It's great to read about the adventures of a strong, brave, smart, young woman who also makes mistakes and then is able to learn from them. Very impressive.
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