CivilWarLand in Bad Decline

by George Saunders
CivilWarLand in Bad Decline  
published February 1st 1997 by Riverhead Trade
binding Paperback
isbn 1573225797   (isbn13: 9781573225793)
pages 192
description George Saunders, a geophysicist, maps out magical realism with this short story collection. He puts an American spin on that sensibility in the sensat...more
date added
03-13-07



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What is there to discuss? This was an amazing, funny book! 1 03/18/2008 08:44PM

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Ken
Ken rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/12/08

Read in April, 2008
recommended to Ken by: Tim Hall
I can’t help but feel like a jackass for coming to the game so late. It has been over ten years since Civilwarland in Bad Decline was first published and introduced George Saunders to the literary world. As a guy who is constantly pounding the table about the value of short stories, I look a bit o’ the fool for having not read and known the value of Saunders’ debut collection. What a way to kick in the doors and make an entrance into the literary world.

Saunders is amazingly comf...more
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Rob
07/26/08

bookshelves: anthology, borrowing
Read in July, 2008
recommended to Rob by: Amy
recommends it for: other readers "married" to DFW that are looking to cheat on him
Perhaps it is unfair to George Saunders to review Civil War Land in Bad Decline when Pastoralia was the book that introduced me to him. But that is the order in which they were read and so that is the order in which I evaluate them. That being said, I suspect I may have been more pleased with this collection...more
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Mike
05/13/08

Read in May, 2008
Short collection of short stories. Many of them feature people engaged in operating a theme park. The stories themselves are rather theme-park: chintzy replicants acting out in a artificial milieu lent an ersatz gravity by the spectre of death. Ghosts abound; death is rendered as impotent and irrelevant as the typical protagonist found here.

To be fair, the collection is from ’96, back when it was still considered somehow breathtaking to point out how badly the real world diverged from the ...more
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haetmonger
bookshelves: fiction
Read in January, 2008
there's a lot of things to like about the stuff in this collection, but unfortunately i've yet to reach the point where i can accurately describe what's wonderful about saunders's writing, and so i'll just stick with mentioning the improvement i'm hoping to see when i read pastoralia: the dude really needs to break free of the formula he's following here. it's lovely as far as formulae go, i can see why he's grown so attached to it, but i'm pretty burnt out of it after reading a whole book's wor...more
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Nicole
06/16/08

out-there, surreal, touching...loved it. what really made me want to read the book was this answer he gave in an interview, regarding his vision and why he writes what he writes:

"...I think at the very last minute of the world, after we've global-warmed ourselves, and it's 400 degrees and only the elite can live in these little refrigerators with plasma TVs, the people who are burning to death outside are gonna kind of be reaching for the hand of the person next to them or having a mem...more
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Tung
01/09/08

bookshelves: short-stories
Read in January, 2005
Saunders is part of the surreal dystopian writers crowd, and this was his much-acclaimed debut set of short stories and novellas. Each of the works is written in the first person narrative of a pathetic loser with a miserable life set in a miserable and surreal societal future. The prose is sharp throughout, with my favorite stories being Isabelle and the book’s lead CivilWarLand in Bad Decline. The novella Bounty that ends the book is also very good. But the other four short stories falter ...more
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Mel
10/04/07

bookshelves: comedy, fiction, short-stories
Read in September, 2007
This short story collection is wierd with a capital W. I like it! There is a theme of, well, Theme Parks. And death. But not like you would expect. Not like kids dying on a great drop ride when the cable snaps and decapitates a kid, or a roller coaster ride when the car goes careening over the edge into the parking lot and crashes into a bus load of Baptists. Not that kind of Theme Park Death.

No, wierder. Like a whacked out security guard hunts down petty thieves and shoots them for stealin...more
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Johnny
02/29/08

Read in July, 2007
Is there a more zany writer than Saunders? Read this collection--in fact, just read the first damn story--and try to argue the opposite. While Saunders will never be a Faulkner nor a Hemingway, he succeeds in his prosodic universe. His matter-of-fact presentation of nonsense and moral decay, all under the guise of omnipresent commercial capitalism, leads the writer into the circus of despair. Main characters are chopped up, shot, and destroyed and then we start the next story. For Saunders,...more
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Diana
07/11/08

Read in July, 2008
recommended to Diana by: Foe
recommends it for: readers not afraid of the dark and gritty
A good short story book with a longer novella at the end. There are many themes, concepts, and settings that travel through the stories, but they aren't necessarily related and can be read (or taught) separately. It is a serious book with a lot of ironic, cynical, and dark humor throughout. There is a heavy focus on knowing yourself, accepting or rejecting yourself, and making the choice to stand up for who you are and what you believe in. Doesn't always work out for the characters. Mostly seems...more
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Rob
10/14/07

bookshelves: fiction
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: folk who want to laugh
considering the number of times this book made me chuckle and even laugh out loud, it's almost surprising it doesn't get 4 stars. but in the end i didn't sense any real depth to the stories. they all seemed to follow more or less the same formula (it's not surprising that the author is an engineer). and the formula indeed allowed for a lot of humor, mainly focused on what tremendous assholes most people are, both those who commit the atrocities as well as those who sit back and simply observe...more
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Laura
Laura rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
01/31/08

Read in December, 2007
This collection of stories is deeply satirical all the way through, but what starts off as a funny, parodic collection unexpectedly turns into a dark, dystopian parodic collection. All the stories are technically about different people in different places, but there is a connecting theme: down-trodden, emasculated men who at places that allow visitors, but not the men themselves, a cheap shot at pretending to be someone else. Whether it's a civil war-themed amusement park or a virtual reality de...more
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Stacy
11/12/07

Read in November, 2007
I read an interview with Saunders in the Believer and saw him at Powell's and damnit if it wasn't about time that I read a little Saunders. So I read a little Saunders and loved a little Saunders. Stories so brisk you need goggles and a helmet. Most are tragicomedy, but one story in particular, "Isabelle", utterly devastated me over the course of 7 pages. Amazing. His style is infectious, too. I read an interview recently with Amy Hempel who said that she could always tell when her stu...more
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Josh
Josh rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
07/13/08

bookshelves: 2008
People describe this collection and Saunders' writing on a whole as dystopian. But, to me, his work explores the dysfunctionality of the present. He pulls no punches when it comes to breaking down the plasticity of our existence. He's funny, satirical and deadly right. His books are the literary equivalent Radiohead albums (post-Bends) with the quirkiness of Thom Yorke's socio-political observations and Jonny Greenwood's graceful yet forceful sonic tinkering. We need more people like George Saun...more
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Jason Smith
04/30/08

Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: fans of dystopian theme parks, ghosts
This is the first full collection of Saunder's work that I've read. I had previously been pouring over his work in back issues of Harper's and the New Yorker and have progressively come to love his stuff.
One of my favorite stories that I have read thus far is Bounty, the last story in Civilwarland, a tale of a dystopian future where Americans live in a genetic apartheid state. The story encompasses the best elements of Saunders righting; absurdity, hilarity, and the deep profound sa...more
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Mr. Baad
Mr. Baad rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
01/22/08

bookshelves: science-fiction
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: people who enjoy satire
I've seen the author of this book, George Saunders, compared to writers like Kurt Vonnegut, and I don't think that's far off. I flew through the short stories in this book, and though I don't find him as funny as Vonnegut, his satirical outlook on American life is definitely twisted and amusing. All set in some near, apocalyptic future, the stories primarily depict our cruelty toward one another for a variety of reasons: for money, for power, for laughs. Being that there are some "mature...more
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Jenn
Jenn rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
06/04/08

Read in May, 2008
i read the short story civilwar land in bad decline in a fiction class and quite enjoyed it. when i found the book on a shelf in a book store i bought it right away.

for the most part, i enjoy the stories, the way the author writes. but a lot of times i felt like he was asking too much of me as a reader, the stories to far out that i have trouble suspending my belief. at times they read like an madlib, combining five completely unrelated subjects into one short story.

i didn't get ...more
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Leftbanker
The 400 Pound CEO is probably the funniest fucking thing that I have ever read. If you enjoy weird humor and you haven’t read this collection of short stories, I truly envy the great time you will have. I have bought this book about three times and I still can’t hang on to it. Jesus, what a bunch of deadbeats I call friends these days. Someone please return my copy; I’m not the damn library. This book is worth stealing from even the best of friends. Screw them, they should be more...more
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Ben
02/28/08

i guess i just don't get george saunders. as far as i can tell, his books are neither funny nor emotionally affecting nor particularly enjoyable on a sentence level. they have cool ideas but they just feel totally squandered to me. i gave up on this one halfway through and i shall not read another.

on the other hand, it worked as a bedtime palate cleanser after the road.

and it was infinitely better than that brief and terrifying reign of phil, or whatever it was called. good lord, that bo...more
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Kendall
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: cool people.
Spike told me about George Saunders. specifically he said, "everything I read from him is the best thing i've ever read." And i happened to be walking to LA's downtown public library at the time, so i checked out the only saunders book that was available. and i ended up paying a dollar fifty later in late fees, but that's neither here nor there. These stories were fantastic. They convey a sense of the ordinary in the bizarre, which is often how i view my life. love it. read it. ...more
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Michael
Michael rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
01/04/08

Read in January, 2008
"Isabelle" and "Offloading for Mrs. Schwartz" are astonishingly good, balancing Saunders' pathetic every(Lo)man with a goodly amount of dignity. A bit formulaic at times: post-industrial/pre-apocalyptic cityscape inhabited by a majority of cheats and greeds, a smattering of idealists, and one or two genuinely good people, and a monologue, first-person intro that describes - in detail - the meniality of the job at hand seems to be the starting point for nearly every story. Al...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 4.25 (1248 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 4.22 (318 ratings)
number of reviews: 139






other editions

Civilwarland in Bad Decline (Paperback)
Civil War Land in Bad Decline: Stories and a Novella (Hardcover)
Civilwarland in Bad Decline (Paperback)