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Heavy Water: And Other Stories

Heavy Water: And Other Stories

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $17.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: FEEL IT. TOUCH IT. BUY IT. AMIS RULES.
Review: Martin Amis is the greatest living writer. Heavy Water is par for the course. It, too, is awesome. 'Let Me Count The Times', 'Career Move' and the other duly noted stories are worth 3 or 4 readings. Before buying though, pick this book up, feel it, touch it, then walk up to the counter and ante up the change.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: HEAVY SATIRE
Review: My first encounter with Martin Amis. A diverse collection of satirical short stories. Each sends an arrow into some area of human behavior. I found most or them amusing and on the mark; focusing on the humor and the pathos of the human condition. Some go a bit too far. Amis stretches, as my grandchildren do when they tell a funny story which gets a laugh from the adults. (No stopping them as they go beyond the point of humor or good sense.)

He has a talent for sensing the absurd and expanding it with great verve, and a wonderful command of the English language.

I look forward to reading his novels.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Believe the hype
Review: People talk about this Martin Amis as though he's the be-all and end-all of modern literature, like he's the Michael Jordan of fiction (only not retired). Well, guess what? They're right. It's hard to imagine anyone thinking they were truly in touch with literature today not having read Amis. He does push the envelope, the very limits of the form, dazzling with every page. But what, I would ask detractors, is wrong with that? Isn't that what great writers are supposed to do? And, this collection is no exception, showing Amis to be, for the most part, in top form. In fact, some of the pieces in the collection, such as the moving and funny 'State of England', in which a yob struggles to find his place in modern England, rank among his best work in any format. Not to mention, 'What Happened to Me on My Holiday', 'Coincidence of the Arts', and 'Janitor on Mars'. All great great great. Don't think, either, that Amis is all about the writerly pyrotechnics he so handily summons. As other reviewers have noted, Amis' writing lately is displaying a lot of, well, heart. There is empathy and compassion in these stories, mixed in with all the brilliance. Any one who thinks otherwise has probably not actually read them. You might even be a little moved by some of them, in between bouts of being dazzled. Imagine that. Highly recommended. You'll no doubt want more of Amis, so go from HW to 'Money', 'London Fields', 'The Information' and 'Times' Arrow'.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A pretty good yard sale
Review: Short stories aren't Martin Amis' thing. It's just impossible to compare Heavy Water to London Fields, Money, The Information and all those other muscular big-budget novels that I find myself dipping into when I need a bit of a lift. Amis' two books of non-fiction are more entertaining. Still, to the dedicated Amis fan, Heavy Water proves that even his cast-off stuff is better than most writers' best; the book displays a tremendous elasticity of style from the hilarious role reversal of the poet and screenplay writer in the first story to the somber and technical science fiction of the 'Janitor on Mars.' Heavy Water is worth the cash outlay, but after this and Night Train, I'm ready for another meaty five hundred pager marinated in the BO of Keith Talent or BS of John Self. And I probably speak for most Amis fans.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Spans The Range
Review: The first story is clever and witty until it is repeated in an altered form later on. And the final story will be passed over by some readers, as it is at best annoying and at worst worthless. Mr. Martin Amis clearly is talented and quick with clever prose and he demonstrates this in his book, "Heavy Water And Other Stories". In between these extremes there are a variety of works than taken as a whole are quite good, however these are interrupted by other stories that are not up to the company they keep.

"Career Move", is the first and one of the better installments. The Author takes an aspect of life that everyone can relate to, changes it into an absurdity, and delivers a very funny and clever piece. "Straight Fiction", is a variant on the theme, and it not only seems familiar it diminishes the first story as well. The latter of the two is a bolder change of society, as we know it, for only the heterosexual need to be concerned about their being "outed". Not only does the Author tread a familiar path in his own book, but many others have played the what if game with major demographic changes at the center of their work. The issues are also quite real, and as such require a much more delicate touch, more sardonic than caustic.

"What Happened To Me On My Holiday", is a complete mystery to me. If torn from the book nothing would have been lost from this reader's experience. It may be there is an event that the story was associated with at the time it was published that would decrypt why it should amuse rather than annoy. If there is I am unaware of it.

I will read more of this writer's work but it will be as I find it, not as I spend the days searching.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: OK
Review: These are hard stories to get involved in, especially the ones that throw out literary agents and such ilk. I like his other work....but this was rather boring.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An Interesting Collection by a Talented Writer
Review: What's up with all these negative reviews? This is a strong collection that certainly does not deserve these pans. Each story in Heavy Water contains an interesting premise that Amis runs with and makes a successful story out of. For instance, in Career Move, the pop culture value of poems and screenplays have been reversed. It's an interesting idea and a funny story. The last piece, What Happened to Me on my Holiday is narrated by an 11 year old who is hard to understand. I think Amis did it this way because he did not want the story, a heartbreaking tale of the sudden death of a young boy, to be taken lightly, to be breezed over. This is an interesting collection. Give it a try if you are at all interested in Amis' work

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An Interesting Collection by a Talented Writer
Review: What's up with all these negative reviews? This is a strong collection that certainly does not deserve these pans. Each story in Heavy Water contains an interesting premise that Amis runs with and makes a successful story out of. For instance, in Career Move, the pop culture value of poems and screenplays have been reversed. It's an interesting idea and a funny story. The last piece, What Happened to Me on my Holiday is narrated by an 11 year old who is hard to understand. I think Amis did it this way because he did not want the story, a heartbreaking tale of the sudden death of a young boy, to be taken lightly, to be breezed over. This is an interesting collection. Give it a try if you are at all interested in Amis' work

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: lame collection
Review: What, actually is, to say it that way, philosophy of a short story. Said with a few words as possible it goes - interesting, appealing in a somwhat strange way, perverse (yes ladies and gentleman, good short story must be perverse in some manner - see Harms for instnace) and perfectly built (one must know his craft). That is just like the good theatre... There is no good one without that knack of talent that shows itself now and there.
What we have here are unispired stories, written for who knows what reason, every once in a while author even outwrites himself, which leaves him in an unpleasant situation from which he can only escape by deus ex machina method.
How to support something that stands for modern prose when my homelands 18th century collections of short fiction are more interesting than this "book".
Amis may be great writer (or so I read in the other reviews around), but his greatness I am not able to comprehend... If this is greatnes, I wonder what disasterous would be...


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