His Illegal Self
by Peter Carey
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Read in January, 2008
recommended to Magdalena by:
I read everything Carey writes!recommends it for: just about anyone - it's an easy, fast read, but very well written
Che Selkirk is a boy whose parents, members of the increasingly violent Students for a Democratic Society, have both disappeared, leaving him with his very rich grandmother. At the age of eight, a woman that Che recognises as his mother suddenly arrives and kidnaps him, taking him from New York to Australia. This is how the book begins, and Che’s adventure through hunger, love and loss becomes almost a coming of age tale as he starts to understand who he is and where his future lies.
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Read in March, 2008
Worthy of another Booker prize?
No.
Fascinating with some literary merit?
Yes.
Carey tells this tale mainly from two characters' perspectives: a boy/son/grandson, Che or Jay, and a mother/kidnapper/revolutionary, Dial or Anna. Confused? Try reading the novel. The prose isn't necessarily dense, but it often demands rereading phrases or sentences in order to interpret what, exactly, is happening in the novel. Carey never uses quotation marks, which, surprisingly, isn't the cause of the confu...more
No.
Fascinating with some literary merit?
Yes.
Carey tells this tale mainly from two characters' perspectives: a boy/son/grandson, Che or Jay, and a mother/kidnapper/revolutionary, Dial or Anna. Confused? Try reading the novel. The prose isn't necessarily dense, but it often demands rereading phrases or sentences in order to interpret what, exactly, is happening in the novel. Carey never uses quotation marks, which, surprisingly, isn't the cause of the confu...more
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Read in February, 2008
Finished, after I thought I wouldn't. With an unusual plot, Carey takes us back to the 70's and the world of SDS (you remember them?) and the Weathermen (and them?) on the lam. Anna Xenos (a.k.a. Dial) just wants to help her old friend, a most notorious radical, by bringing her 8-year-old son (named, I kid you not, Che) for a visit. A funny thing happens on the way to the happy meeting, however. Only I can't say. So... Dial, when plans change suddenly, keeps going with the boy and winds up ...more
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Read in May, 2008
Takes place in the early 70s, first in New York and then in the Australian jungle/outback. The story is told from a 7 yr old boy's perspective. Che or Jay is the son of members of a militant political underground group and is being raised by his wealthy maternal grandmother until he is kidnapped by a young woman (his mother?). The 2 flee to Australia and end up hiding out in a rather unwelcoming commune in the jungle, a place neither is mentally or physically prepared for. The woman, Dial, is a...more
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i am really excited about this book. it was written up in the ny times book review. here is quick summary from amazon:Raised by his boho-turned-bourgeois grandmother on New York's Upper East Side, Che Selkirk, seven years old in 1972, hasn't seen his Weathermenesque parents since he was a toddler, but when a young woman who calls herself Dial walks into Che's apartment one afternoon, he believes his mother has finally come. Within two hours, Dial and Che are on the lam and heading for Philly a...more
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Read in March, 2008
First of all, I did not read but listened to the story, avoiding the difficult writing style Carey imposes. That being said, I really struggled with this book. Except for the boy, I could not find one character with any redeeming value. I was often quite agitated as adult after adult made decisions which left the boy vulnerable, lonely, and scared, identity-less in a sea of adult egos. If this is a story about the radical anti-war groups of the 60’s and 70’s, it only reinforces an image ...more
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Read in March, 2008
Peter Carey's latest novel tells the story of eight-year-old Che, the son of SDS radicals long since gone underground for crimes against the state, who is cared for by his wealthy grandmother. When the grandmother regretably gives Che over to a young woman the boy believes to be his mother, events spiral out of control and before you can say "g'day" the boy finds himself living on a hippie compound in a fecund corner of Australia. Carey handles the child's perspective quite well and th...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
fans of peter carey, those looking for an interesting plot
I wish I could give this book 3.5 stars. I read it in three fast days, so obviously I got into the plot and characters. The writing is always rich but at times seems far too sophisticated for the voice of the young boy from whose perspective we see the story. I let go of that after a few chapters, though, accepting a voice that could both see things as a child and accept them as an adult. The ending, while beautiful in imagery and striking in tone and twist, left me a little unsure what had ...more
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Read in February, 2008
For a Peter Carey book this didn't have as much resonance for me as previous works. Certainly the writing is as alive as the Australian jungle where Che and Dial end up, full of twisted sentences and brilliant allusive language that suddenly flashes in your mind's eye. It's also excellent at suggesting the workings and priorities of a child's mind. But it settles after the first thrilling 100 pages into something much more mundane (which is possibly intentional) as days drag by and Dial and ...more
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Read in March, 2008
I didn't finish reading this book because I wanted to keep my sanity. I kept trying to figure out what the heck was going on. Many reviewed that it was a 'difficult' read. I am always up for a challenge and have no issues w/ a difficult read but in my opinion it was a HORRIBLE read. If anyone has read this book and liked it (understood it) please email me, I have questions about many things in the first few chapters I didn't understand. It was the worst book I've ever attempted to read. It made...more
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I've been reading Carey's books for years, and still love the guy. I feel like he's pared down the prose this time to what's essential. The points of view shift from Che (an 8 year old boy) to his kidnapper fluidly and truthfully. There are no superfluous descriptions, there aren't even quotation marks used, but the book is so rich and pitch-perfect. Characters change, their weaknesses shift, who you distrust in the beginning you depend on in the end. Even Australia changed for me by the en...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
people with a soft spot for dirty hippies
I liked the way this book helped me remember the feelings of being a precocious boy, aware of bigger things around me but not really clued in, and having to make up my own explanations for events. It's odd that this doesn't happen as often in parenting my own kids as it does in literature, particularly David Mitchell's BLACK SWAN GREEN.
I also really enjoyed the character of the lawyer. To say why would be a spoiler, but if you read the book you'll probably laugh as I did.
I don't know wh...more
I also really enjoyed the character of the lawyer. To say why would be a spoiler, but if you read the book you'll probably laugh as I did.
I don't know wh...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommended to Fran by:
LA Times
Peter Carey has twice won the Booker Prize. "His Illegal Self" is set in the US and Australia. Carey was born in Australia and now lives in NYC. Set in the 70s, it is about a boy named Che, the son of people in the radical student movement. His grandmother obtains custody of him as an infant and has raised him until the age of the 7 under the name of Jay. His mother hoodwinks an old friend into unknowingly collaborating with a kidnapping but dies in a bomb explosion the very day o...more
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Has potential at the beginning, but it isn't realized... the characters aren't really fleshed out enough to engage the reader in their fates. Carey has done a much better job at inhabiting the voices of his characters in other books.
There were some random things that irked me. There are too many clever, smug phrases. And I understood early on that the characters had hygiene problems- not sure why it had to be mentioned so many times. It is grating in the same way as a person who won't stop...more
There were some random things that irked me. There are too many clever, smug phrases. And I understood early on that the characters had hygiene problems- not sure why it had to be mentioned so many times. It is grating in the same way as a person who won't stop...more
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Read in February, 2008
I am a huge Peter Carey fan - huge. I can't tell you how disappointed I was in this book. I couldn't see the character, I couldn't find the voice, I didn't see the connections, and don't get me to talk about the ending, how predictable. I'm sorry, Peter, but I don't want you to use bits of your old books either!
I will give an extra star to the place they end up living and the grandmother. Both of these are well described and alive, for me.
I will give an extra star to the place they end up living and the grandmother. Both of these are well described and alive, for me.
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Read in May, 2008
I loved this story of a 7-year-old "on the lamb" (as he calls it) with a leggy, formidable ex-SDS outlaw gal. What Peter Carey does best is to communicate the impact of life's daily textures on a soul that is a work in progress. The parent in me was mildly terrified by his presentation of his protagonist's interpretations -- of the banal and the heavy. Takes place in the wild and woolly Australian outback c 1972. Nice on the hypocrisy of privileged "revolutionaries," too. (Bo...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in February, 2008
As usual, Peter Carey delivers with this book. It is a story of a boy and a woman, a woman that he thinks is his mother. I have to say as a parent, this book was so depressing. What i love about Peter Carey is his ability to tell a story that is so real, so uncontrived. In the end, i hated the story, the people made me so angry, and I didn't relate to any of them. Only Peter Carey could write a book like that and still have me happy I read it, and feeling like I understood people a little b...more
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Read in July, 2008
This is the first book I have read by Carey and it took a little bit before I caught on to his style. There are no quotations marks. Dialog blends in with prose. Also, the plot jumps from point A to point E and then back to point B... It is a little confusing at first, but it works. I can see why he has won the Booker Prize before. He describes the truth that exists in the everyday moments of life while he tells the story of a boy kidnapped from his grandmother and hidden in a hippie commu...more
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I just started this and it's about a little boy being raised by his wealthy grandmom and then his mom comes back and takes him away and he is so happy to see her but she won't even let him call her "Mom" and he longs to. That's as far as I have gotten, I have two sons, so reading from a little boys perspective intrigues me (and of course breaks my heart, which for some reason I love to do).
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Read in March, 2008
I will not finish reading this book in protest of the CHEAP novelist's tactic of introducing a beloved pet only to kill it later for emotional effect. For once, can't we have a puppy or kitten that makes it through the whole story and is last seen curling comfortable in its bed at the end of the novel? I can only hope a stingray's barbed tail pierces your cold, cold, kitten-hating heart, Peter Carey, and that this book shows up on remainder shelves very soon.
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