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S'està carregant… BLACKBOX: A Novel in 840 Chapters (2002)de Nick Walker
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Fiction.
Suspense.
Thriller.
HTML: Cross a road, take a train, or get on an airplane and you put your life in the hands of a stranger -- every bit as screwed up, every bit as fallible and as human as you are. Then the person turns out not to be a stranger at all, and suddenly it's much worse. In America and Britain and the sky in between, an apparently disparate group of people is connected, whether intimately or by chance, to the tragic death of a stowaway on board flight AF266. As the action veers across countries and time zones, the stowaway's real identity is revealed through stolen black box recordings, answering machine messages, sitcom outtakes, and court transcripts. Told in a shifting, circular narrative, the interwoven lives make up a jolting and layered puzzle that builds to a heart-stopping, chilling climax. An intelligent and invigorating novel with a bizarre menu of dysfunctional characters, Blackbox is the story of an attempt to erase a life on tape. .No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — S'està carregant… GèneresClassificació Decimal de Dewey (DDC)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-LCC (Clas. Bibl. Congrés EUA)ValoracióMitjana:
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It’s a sort of take on the six degrees of separation idea, and I guess if you drew a diagram with all the characters on it, with lines showing the connections between them, the result would be the sort of horrendous tangled knot my i-pod headphones tend to get in when left in my pocket. My brain wasn’t big enough to hold all the links, or to fully understand every single facet of the story, but what I did like very much was the attention to detail, and the little moments of humour. Like where Sam the voice-over artiste was in a lift and was astonished to find his own voice telling him what floor he was on.
There was a serious side to it too. Death is never far from the thoughts of the characters, and in particular the last words of suicides or accident victims. At one point “Unfunny John”, a stand-up comedian whose entire act consists of him shooting himself in the head, suggests that planes should be fitted with individual blackboxes – one for each passenger “just in case they found themselves next to a stranger who meant nothing to them. They could record a message to a loved one, or to humanity. It would be a valuable contribution to the understanding of the human condition”. His companion points out that it would never happen – it would serve to make passengers more nervous – but I thought it was an interesting idea all the same.
It’s a quirky book, eschewing chapters in favour of short snappy sections numbered backwards from 840 to 0 in the manner of a countdown. Some sections consist of nothing but an ellipsis, most are no more than a paragraph or so and make the most of the author’s economical, punchy writing style. For all its quirks it is fundamentally a great read, I do hope there will be more from this author. ( )