Yellow Dog

by Martin Amis
Yellow Dog
book data
291 ratings, 2.74 average rating, 34 reviews (more data...)
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published
2003 (first published 2005) by Knopf Canada

binding
Hardcover, 352 pages

literary awards
2003 Booker Prize Longlist

isbn
0676976166    (isbn13: 9780676976168)

description
Brilliant, painful, dazzling, and funny as hell, Yellow Dog is Martin Amis’ highly anticipated first novel in seven years and a stunning return to the...more




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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 380)

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Shane
03/29/09
Shane rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

Read in April, 2009
My first Martin Amis, and I think, given his patriarchal theme, I will stick with his dad Kingsley in future.
Amis is bold - no question - dealing with subjects such as incest, gratuitious violence, rage, drug abuse, pornography, impotence, spousal rape. He even invents his own language for the character k8 (Kate) which is witty after you figure it out.He enters the world of porn with terms like Blackeye, Cockout, Redface, Boxback, Yellow tongue, Facial - some explained, others left to our ...more
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  8 comments

Molly
05/09/09
Molly rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1401352030)

Read in January, 2005
I haven't thought about this book in a long time. But now and then, some images & dialogues in it haunt me. This happened this weekend, so I thought it worth a short note/review. Much of the writing is brilliant -- so perhaps it deserves a higher rating for style & language. But I didn't like this book at all, and yet felt compelled to read the whole damn thing. And now it continues to appear in my waking life, and who knows, maybe my dream life too. Vivid & grotesque, troubling, off-putt...more
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T.j.
F. Almost utterly unreadable. A great disappointment. I had always been a fan of Amis' highly stylized prose, biting satire, and comic characters doing bad things, but this shambolic tale of tabloid journalism, male violence, and royal scandal is a disaster. One of the worst books I've read in a long time.

I used to love Amis--met him twice, have a signed edition of London Fields--but this has devalued him in my eyes.
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Manny
11/27/08
Manny rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

Read in January, 2007
Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear, oh dear, oh dear.

I just don't know what to say. It's like a friend has invited you around for dinner, and they put it down on the table, and somehow they don't seem to be aware that they left it too close to the cat's litter tray. One sniff is enough that you're quite certain you know what happened. What's wrong with them? Do they have a cold, which has temporarily removed their sense of smell? Is it a bizarre joke?

Well, if you thought that an...more
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  5 comments

Suzette
Read in January, 2006
A very funky book - couldn't pinpoint it. Not bad, just a little english and a different writing style. Kind of a guys book too.
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R.
09/24/07
R. rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1401352030)

bookshelves: 2007
You know what this makes me think of? Black Adder. Seriously, like this is what Black Adder V would be.

An idiot king, a helpful servant, a scandal to be reckoned with.

Exactly the stuff we need in this day and age: another Black Adder.

Longlisted for the Booker Prize, 2003.

Am of the mind that...that this novel contains some of Amis' best comedic riffs.

And I do I mean the best.

Working title was: Men in Power.
...more
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Alejadita
divertido, para unas buenas vacaciones
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Ben-ya-meano
Read in January, 2006
recommends it for: People who enjoyed 'Money' and 'London Fields'
This book was given the proverbial bash by the critics when it was released, but it's not that bad really.
Several intersecting character stories are, finally, woven together and when it's fun it's really fun.
Some of the characters are tiresome though, and you find yourself wanting him to get back to the juicy ones.
As an aside, for all the people who say Amis paints women in an unfavorably two-dimensional light and accuse him of being a sexist pig, to those people I would say - ...more
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Bill
01/27/09
Bill rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

Read in March, 2009
My first Amis, courtesy of mr. rethinger. Amis fans seem to hate it, but I thought it was bizarre and wonderful. Yeah, the English can be a bit rough if you're a yank like me, but it was less difficult to decipher than "A Clockwork Orange," and I doubt there's anyone out there criticizing Burgess for making it a difficult read. Did any of those pricks give Clockwork two stars? Prob not. If this one sucks I can't wait to read everything else.
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Craig
07/25/08
Craig rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

Read in July, 2008
Reminds me of his father's work, not in style or subject matter, but in audacity and brilliance of prose. Three quarters of the way into this book I'd've written that it was the best thing--not written by his father or Evelyn Waugh--that I've read in the last few years. The ending--endings are hard, Elmore Leonard told me that personally-- fell down enough so that I an't honestly say that. But still a very funny, rude, book about the obscenifaction of western culture.
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Daniel Mcbrearty
He is so much his father's son. And that is no bad thing at all.

Only read a few of Amis's things, and he has yet to disappoint. He is funny and quite acerbic. He has a knack for creating these characters that have something of contemporary British archetype about them. And he mixes a good plot. And, like his father, he tends to leave it all on a light and rather satisfying note, even when the subject matter is rather dark. Great stuff! I'm a fan.
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Amy
12/02/08
Amy rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

While I remain a huge Amis fan, I'm sad I saved this one for so long. This is pretty much London Fields redux, except nowhere near as appealing, interesting, or compelling.
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Paul Stankus
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: someone going to the beach
I found this book in a dorm room in Uzbekistan. I'd read Money by Martin Amis and ejoyed it but this was too silly with too many different story lines that all come together in a silly way. The price was right and it did make some funny points of contemporary British culture but I wouldn't recommend that anyone go out of their way to read it.
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David
05/16/07
David rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

I really love a lot of Martin Amis' work. But sometimes, even your favorite authors will fall asleep with their head on the keyboard. Some editor will then turn all of that gibberish into real words. Not neccesarily words that belong together or anything, but there will be words. This book has words. I think. And an airplane.
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Kitty-Wu
Read in January, 2006
Aunque no puedo negar que Amis escribe como quiere, me queda la duda de si sabe aprovecharlo en esta historia.... no basta con ser provocativo, hay que saber explicar lo que se quiere explicar, sin marear la perdiz durante casi 300 páginas, que es cuando empieza a verse la luz... No lo acabé.
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Andrew Kramcsak
First time I've read Amis. It does seem like he is going out on a limb with this book. In interviews he has said this is his favorite book, as its different from the others in manner. On a side note, Amis bears a striking likeness to a pirate. A pirate who writes books.
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Jason
12/04/07
Jason rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

not a big fan. this was my first Martin Amis book and i was really looking forward to him. i'll give him another try sometime, but this book left a bad taste in my mouth. I have to admit the porn references were really hilarious though.
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Mark Robson
This book had moments - very few moments - of Amis' brilliance with language, but overall it felt like he never quite got a hold on what he was trying to do with this book. There are bits and pieces, but overall it just doesn't deliver.
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Chad
08/08/07
Chad rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

Wasn't drawn into the main storyline, and finally decided to stop reading on page 91. Perhaps had I been better introduced to Xan at first, I would have cared more about how he changed after he was attacked.
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Clint
08/22/07
Clint rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400077273)

I didn't think this book was as bad as everyone else seemed to think it was. It was funny, gross, vulgar. A little cheesy at times, but hell Martin Amis is getting old, give him a break.
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