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ORIGINAL BLISSThe stories in Original Bliss are concerned, appropriately, with the complexities of sex and the lack of it. Whether in Copenhagen or New York City, in the close confines of a TV wardrobe department or in weightless outer space, A.L.Kennedy's characters are engaged in possibly fruitless attempts to close down emotional distances and fill a physical void.
Taken together, the work in this book is testament to a unique and extraordinary talent. The rare combination of exquisite writing, profound thought and an electrifying grasp of our most intimate desires makes this book of real importance. German ("Gleissendes Gluck") and French ("Volupté Singuliére") editions were published in 2000 and 2001 respectively. |
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| Reviews | |||
| Good: |
"Kennedy delivers
these bittersweet truths with imagery that is often arresting" "Kennedy depicts
the complex workings of love and desire with rare honesty and humour." "What is really
worth observing about "Original Bliss"is that it is like no other book,
and that its author deserves to be compared to no one but her own fiercely
talented self." |
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| ALK says: | Kind review, unfortunate second name. | ||
| Good: |
"A compelling story
about sex and the need for love, it is a tremendous performance, black
and brutal as well as eccentric, touching and funny." "Subtle, erotic
and never silly, Kennedy's physicists convince as Winterson's do not
- even when jerking off in space." |
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| ALK says: | Not that I've ever actually written about physicists. | ||
| Bad: |
"Kennedy's prose
is too stodgy for mass appeal and the effect is one of gloom and despair." |
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| ALK says: | Well, the knowledge that I don't have mass appeal would render me prone to gloom and despair, I'm sure. | ||
| Bad: | "At
150 pages, it seems over-freighted, unable to keep all its balls in the
air." Steven Poole - Independent on Sunday |
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| Silly: |
"love is a many spendoured
thing, unless you're a character in an A.L.Kennedy short story, in which
case it twists you, shakes you, throws you around the room and gives you
a kick in the stomach, just to make sure." "...her crystal-sharp prose
rewards the reader on every page." "Even at her dullest,
she's startlingly sharp..." "Very much a woman's
book" |
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| ALK says: | And, given the number of errors in his factual descriptions, a woman's book he didn't bother to read. | ||