One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

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4.15 of 5 stars 4.15  ·  rating details  ·  246,872 ratings  ·  3,783 reviews
A fiftieth-anniversary edition of Ken Kesey's searing American classic.

Boisterous, ribald, and ultimately shattering, Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest has left an indelible mark on the literature of our time. Turning conventional notions of sanity and insanity on their heads, the novel tells the unforgettable story of a mental ward and its inhabitants, especia...more
Hardcover, 50th Anniversary Edition, 277 pages
Published January 19th 2012 by Viking Adult (first published 1962)
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K.D. Oliveros
Mar 07, 2012 K.D. Oliveros rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to K.D. by: Time 100, 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die (2006-2010)
"Ting. Tingle, tingle, tremble toes,
She’s a good fisherman, catches hens, puts ‘em inna pens
Wire blier, limber lock, three geese inna flock
One flew east, one flew west
One flew over the cuckoo’s nest

O-U-T- spells out… goose swoops down and plucks you out."
The title of the book was taken from a nursery rhyme but the first 3 and last lines were from the book, i.e., thoughts inside the head of the schizophrenic narrator, Chief Bromden as the nursery rhyme was used to be sung to him by his grandmothe...more
Manny
Like most people who grew up in the 60s, I loved this book and, even more, the film version with Jack Nicholson. I was reminded of it yesterday when Not and I got to talking about the Winona Ryder movie Girl, Interrupted.

"Oh," said Not dismissively, "it's just a remake of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest."

But I completely disagree. In fact, I think it's the most coherent criticism I've ever seen of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and does a wonderful job of subverting the message. Throughout mo...more
Mariel
Dec 09, 2010 Mariel rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: shut up I am dreaming
Recommended to Mariel by: the empty threats of little lord
I am scared of Nurse Ratched. I'm sure she'd make me feel insane, if I met her. At least I'd feel like I had a flat chest, for once. It's like standing next to someone shorter than my 5'5. I love feeling tall! What about hanging around with crazy people? Would I feel crazy too? Or would I feel more sane? (The first one.)

Randall did the wrong thing. He'd have been out of jail. It's all a trap. Probation, mental asylums. They should just do their time and have done with it. (The system is set up t...more
Ann
This is one of the most fantastic novels of individualism pitted against the vast depersonalization of industrial society ever written. Ken Kesey has an extraordinary grasp of the challenges faced by us all in modern civilization, and he is able to convey his ideas through some of the richest imagery I have ever read. My favorite line in the novel, when Chief Bromden (the paranoid schizophrenic narrator) says, "But it's the truth, even if it didn't happen," sets the reader up from the very begin...more
Devlin Scott
I can’t describe this novel any better than the write-up that exists on the back cover of my copy:

He’s a boisterous, brawling, fun-loving rebel who swaggers into the ward of a mental hospital and takes over…

He’s a lusty, profane, fun-loving fighter who rallies the other patients around him by challenging the dictatorship of Big Nurse. He promotes gambling in the ward, smuggles in wine and women. At every turn, he openly defies her rule.

The contest starts as sport (with McMurphy taking bets on th
...more
Bonnie
Interested in more of my reviews? Visit my blog!

Another on my list of Banned/Challenged books. And another book that I apparently failed to be given as a reading requirement when I was younger.

I don’t have much to say about this series as I know the vast majority of you have already read this, but I will say that I was most definitely thrown by the story as I really didn’t know what I was getting myself into. ‘Wow’ was the most used word while reading/listening to this book, for sure.

The settin...more
mark monday
another oddly dream-like modern classic. and another one where the misogyny both dates it and makes it hard to take seriously. what's wrong with guys? don't they realize that it's other guys that are really the problem? ah well. still, a good book but not a great one despite its reputation.
Samara Steele
Last night, at about 2 am, I finished 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' by Ken Kesey.

I lay awake for a long time afterward, watching the bars of light on the ceiling, holding my eyes open until the pupils dilated enough to shrink the light, then I'd blink and have to start all over.

Finally I sat up and turned on the lights.

The book had done something to me. Like it'd punched me in the face and said, "Do something, you idiot!"

So I gathered up a bunch of sentimental shit from around my apartment...more
Colin Miller
Randle Patrick McMurphy might just be the greatest character in the history of literature.

As the central figure to Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, McMurphy’s flawed charm explodes off the page in his battle against the dreaded Nurse Ratched, a stiff, tyrannical woman who uses subtle means (such as shame in group therapy sessions) to control mental patients without them realizing they’re being controlled at all. Set in an all-male mental health facility, the novel is told through th...more
David Holste
Aug 29, 2007 David Holste rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone.
One of the many things I took from this book (my favorite book) is that although the human spirit can be crushed, it is impossible to kill.

Written by the late Ken Kesey, One Flew Over the Cuckoos's Nest is a dark satire that takes place in a mental institution during the late 1950's. The protagonist, R.P. McMurphy, is a fast talking con man that gets himself committed in order to escape doing time on a prison work-farm. Once inside the institution his free-wheeling nature collides with Nurse Rat...more
Cathy
Remarkable. Flawed. A great story. I've read this book at 20 year intervals over my life and each reading affects me differently.

In the 70's I thought it was simply an anti-establishment book, and McMurphy was our hero fighting the system.

In the 90's, I started seeing a lot of cracks. McMurphy didn't seem so brillant when I realized he was incarcerated for statatory rape (or as he describes it to the doctor "she was asking for for it, if you know what I mean, Doc"). Kesey seems misogynistic in h...more
Milo
I have a love/hate relationship with this book. The writing and imagery are superb and I always love a "down with tyrannical overloads, generic living, and medicalization" moral, but its other lesson leaves me cringing. In the basic knowledge I have of Ken Kesey, the book ultimately seems very misogynistic and anti-feminist. I'm all for a gender balance, but this book botches up the entire process in a method that purposely lacks tongue-in-cheek flair.

Basically, the plot seems to involve men me...more
Andrew
“One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest” is about the defiant and aggressive Randle McMurphy, who arrives in an insane asylum run by the strict and inflexible “Big Nurse”. At first, it seems that he faked being insane so that he could get out of a prison work camp. His personality and his will are so at odds with the culture of the ward that he gets into an ever increasing power struggle with Big Nurse, while at the same time inspiring the other patients in a way that they have not felt in years. Despi...more
Miss Kim
Still excellent the second read....


I first read this about 20 years ago…I still think it is one of the best I’ve read. I’m not necessarily a fan of Mr. Kesey, but I do love the story he created here.

I won’t give a plot synopsis, as I know it’s been done many times. It is just a great read if you’ve got a few hours. Randle Patrick McMurphy and Chief Bromden are two of my favorite characters. The pov is from Chief, who is a patient in the asylum and it is kind of interesting to hear it from his pe...more
Eric Althoff
Jan 22, 2008 Eric Althoff rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: antifeminists/misogynists
No one in the hospital has met anyone quite like R.J. McMurphy, the roughneck Irishman who fakes mental illness in order to be transferred from a work-release program into an institution. His bravado and braggadoccio lands him into the hospital run by "Big Nurse" Ratched, a controlling and quietly domineering den hen who rules over her wards with calculated iciness. It is all but assured that she and McMurphy will clash, and do. But because their war is a foregone conclusion, the real heart of t...more
Shawn
This strikes me as so overrated, and disappointingly juvenile in its fundamental point of view -- "THEY" are out to get you, everyone in concert, just to spoil your good time. Ball-cutters are bad; hookers who fly their breasts free on a fishing boat are good; real men know the difference.

None of these characters seem real, and the concerns of the novel -- freedom, social limits, the individual and the machine -- are presented so stupidly, in such a high schoolish manner, that it's hard to take...more
Nema Al-Araby
I finished this novel and I don't know why I remembered Fight Club and all the mind-f**k novels that could come to your mind. I went through the last page mumbling in my mind what an intense, heavy novel.
The novel started off really slow, I couldn't go on along the whole first part until things got really interesting with McMurphy's charismatic personality and insane ideas in an insane institution run by insane people. I also actually really loved chief Bromden's character with all his Im-not-du...more
Marlena
Jan 14, 2008 Marlena rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Marlena by: List of reccomended books
I read this book about a year ago, but I'm rereading now, and am once again struck by it's brilliance. One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest is and forever will be a classic, and for good reason; It is both terrifying and fascinating, and also, amid all of the fear and the stifling oppression, and the fate of each of the characters, it is also a novel of hope. It examines the social hierchies within a mental institution as a metaphor for the social hierchies that take place in the world, and, througho...more
Natalie
I'd always wanted to read this book and somehow it had bypassed me until recently when I went on a buying binge at Borders with some holiday gift certificates. I had, of course, seen the movie before -- but ages ago. I didn't remember much about it (except, unfortunately, the ending), but I remembered enough to assume I would love the book. And, I did. It was funny, sweet, but has moments of darkness. It was interesting to delve into the minds and lives of the patients of a mental institution wh...more
Jeffrey
Who knew drug use resulted in behavior and experiences that are so similar to those of the mentally ill? Well, maybe it doesn't actually, but Ken Kesey sure makes it seem plausible. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest brings you into the Chief's world, a place where Nurse Ratchet's head inflates until it fills the hall and carries her down into his dormitory. Hallucinations intertwine with reality with no warning as to which is which throughout this novel, and while it is clear Chief is sick, it is...more
emily
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Katrice
I can't. I just... can't.
Chief Ken, you have taken my breath away.
What a beautiful, beautiful book.
I wouldn't lie and pretend that i'm not an intense person, but this book had me shaking. Shaking inside, physically shaking... shaking my head..
I am enlightened my friends for you see,
I know now that THIS! this is what the Merry Pranksters saw in Ken Kesey.
if you were (or are) "on the bus", this is why.
Heck, Kerouac liked this book.
I even got scared to go on reading through this at times beca...more
Brad
i. Lost the damn book! Shit.

ii. Found it!

iii. Finished, but I need some time to let this sink in. The review is coming.

iv. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest is about non-conformity. It is also about the horrors of the mental health system circa the late ‘50s & early ‘60s. I am sure it is about some other things I didn’t pick up this time around. But it is also about metaphor, and that was the theme in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest that most spoke to me.

Chief Bromden is the narrator, you se...more
Night~light
Sep 25, 2008 Night~light rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone
This is my favourite book. It's just a work of genius.
When you read this book you will start to wonder if the author was really writing about some crazy people or our society is one big madhouse, full of them...
Sometimes I think that I want to read this book again after some years... My view will be different and it will be interesting to think over every idea again. And this book is full of ideas. :)
Dan
Admittedly, I viewed the film based on this book prior to reading the work itself (though not recently) which definitely warped/directed my perspective (hard to NOT imagine Jack Nicholson, Christopher Lloyd, and Danny DeVito assume their respective roles). It was difficult to imagine the ward, staff, and characters outside of the film's rendering (which speaks highly of the casting/acting, I suppose). Furthermore, the "shock factor" (no pun intended) of the more erratic and graphic scenes (at le...more
Ashe
I feel so divided. This is a book I read for English and I felt the beginning was really confusing and kind of stale to be honest. The plot picked up a couple of times in the book and fell flat again just as quickly. There were some times where I actually laughed out loud but then some chapters I was bored to tears.
But the ending was surprisingly good. Even though I should've been expecting what happened, I was kind of caught off guard. Well that happens with most books for me. I never think wha...more
Sarah Law
Jan 04, 2009 Sarah Law rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: The girls at Klarman
An excellent book, a must-read for anyone interested in psychology. The ending is not a barrel of laughs, though, and it's pretty dark at some points. I took off one star because I was really confused about the white fog the Indian kept seeing; that just didn't make sense to me. Maybe it was foreshadowing, but I was a little bit lost there.

I loved this book because it reminded me EXACTLY of the first treatment center I ever went to; when I was at Klarman, I was the crazy redhead plotting against...more
Anne  (Booklady) Molinarolo
3.5 Stars

I understand that I’ll attract negative comments with my rating, but please hear me out first. I was 18 when the superb film adaptation starring Jack Nicholson as R. P. McMurphy and Louise Fletcher as the 50 something Big Nurse Ratched and was blown away with what I saw. I couldn’t wait to read the book itself. Back then I was ever so slightly disappointed by Ken Kesey’s Modern Classic. Today, I still feel the same way. The story is still believable and relevant. McMurphy is still doome...more
Velma
Dec 03, 2012 Velma rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: believers in "it's even better than the movie"-books
Almost invariably, when a movie has been made of a book, I prefer the medium I was exposed to first; this is one of those few exceptions. Although the Oscar-winning Milos Forman film is outstanding and is one of my favorites, I enjoyed the original story written by Ken Kesey even more.

I won't bother with a plot summary, as I figure if you aren't familiar with the story line already you probably aren't interested anyway, and, if you know me, you are well aware of how much I abhor spoilers. I'll j...more
Luis
Mejor el libro que la película.
La lectura de Alguien voló sobre el nido del cuco la he realizado a ciegas. Me llamó la atención el título y aún mucho más el argumento. Había oído de la buena crítica de la película, pero quise probar primero el original y después contrastar con el celuloide.
En la narración hay un increíble manejo de recursos de todo tipo. Hay metáforas, pasajes espejismo, diálogos complejos y diálogos sencillos y contundentes, descripciones banales o faraónicas, chanzas... Es com...more
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Nurse Ratched, What Made Her Cruel? 13 117 Apr 11, 2013 03:15am  
Ken Kesey 23 108 Apr 04, 2013 06:59pm  
One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest 15 52 Mar 28, 2013 10:37pm  
Insanity 7 102 Mar 15, 2013 05:55pm  
A retelling 7 76 Mar 15, 2013 03:39pm  
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Mass Market Paperback)
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Paperback)
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Paperback)
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Paperback)
One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest (Paperback)

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American writer, who gained world fame with his novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962, filmed 1975). In the 1960s, Kesey became a counterculture hero and a guru of psychedelic drugs with Timothy Leary. Kesey has been called the Pied Piper, who changed the beat generation into the hippie movement.

Ken Kesey was born in La Junta, CO, and brought up in Eugene, OR. Kesey spent his early years hun...more
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