Blonde: Una novela dobre Marilyn Monroe

by Joyce Carol Oates
Blonde: Una novela dobre Marilyn Monroe  
published January 22nd 2002 by Plaza y Janes
binding Paperback
isbn 1400001463   (isbn13: 9781400001460)
pages 944
date added
03-13-07



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Caitlin
Read in August, 2008
Blonde: A roman a clef for a vie a clef

Melancholy, a little hungover, and still in bed at 11:30 one morning during my reading of this book, I descended into mournful rumination about fiction. For the first time in my life, fiction felt truly like the inferior literary form--the slag sister of Verse, Essay, and Reportage. Why write fiction? Why tell yourself silly stories, much less expect others to endure your own arrogant fantasies? In retrospect I think this Great Doubt sprang from simple ...more
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Bess
02/25/08

recommends it for: EVERYONE
Finally finished, wish I were still reading, all magic is gone from life now, pls advs.

This is the New Feminist Text. I honestly think if every gal too young to remember (or too young to even have a mother who actively remembers the effects of) the women's movement of the 60s were given a copy of this book, we'd have much less patriarchy snackdom in the world, much more equal pay, and way fewer pointy-toed stilettos.

Marilyn Monroe was continuously, systematically screwed over, pawned, a...more
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Mama Kaye
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in May, 2008
I never thought I'd be interested in reading a book about Marilyn Monroe, but wow, what a wonderful experience! Oates points out from the beginning that this is a work of fiction -- it is not a biography. However, it is clear that while much of the text is a product of Oates' imagination, it is based on a solid foundation of fact.

Once again, I thoroughly enjoyed Oates' writing style -- she has a way of getting inside the heads of her characters unlike few other authors I've read. The reader...more
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Caitlin
Foxfire was the first JCO I ever read, and this was the second. If Foxfire made me start to *maybe* think I was falling in love with JCO as a writer, Blonde transformed that maybe into a definite in the first line.

An avid Marilyn fan for years, I have always been most interested in firsthand accounts of her acting methods and her status as a misunderstood genius. And there's a lot of that here. But there's so much more. Most reviews of this book use the word "ambitious" and I'm...more
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Alison
08/18/07

bookshelves: contemporaryfiction, fivestars
Read in May, 2007
recommends it for: classic movie fans, marilyn obsessees
I had no idea what this book was about when I checked it out from the library. It wasn't until I got it home that I noticed the cover was a silhouette of Marilyn Monroe with her back to the camera. This book kept me up til the wee hours for the seven days it took me to finish it. It is a fictionalized biography in that it recalls the life of Marilyn from birth to "mysterious" death at age 37 (?) from an overdose of sleeping pills with conversations and situations imagined as they mi...more
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Colleen
This is totally unfair, but I gave this book a 4 only because the story itself was so gut-wrenchingly difficult for me to read, and not because of the quality of the story or the writing. This is one of those books that's situated on some fine line between fiction and biography, and it's about the life of Marilyn Monroe. The way that Oates is able to get into her character, even the dialogue of Marilyn, makes you feel that you are really reading an autobiography at times, set in story form. I ho...more
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Peggy
01/23/08

Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: Joyce Carol Oates - I think her best
What a book!!! I began reading this book Sunday night and seven hours later realized I hadn't put the book down.. If I stopped for a drink of water, I don't remember it..
Such a tragic story.. and though Joyce Carol Oates calls it a work of fiction.. not all is fiction.. "1950: In a season of clandestine radioactive explosions. Fierce hot winds rushing across the Nevada Salt Flats. the deserts of western Utah, birds stricken in flight plummeting to earth like cartoon birds. Dying antelope,...more
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Joey
04/15/08

Read in May, 2000
recommends it for: Monroe fans, biography readers
I am not an avid fan of JCO; I find her writing inconsistent. Her style is candid; the ability to make a single word into a sentence. Other novels are overwrought with a gothic style that feels like you're wading through mud to find the story.

'Blonde' is a favorite, and may even be among my top 20 favorite books.

JCO uses a fictional, autobiographical constuct to tell the sad, ill-fated life of Marilyn Monroe. Because JCO uses conjecture as she illuminates the story of the most famous ...more
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Jo
09/03/08

Read in September, 2008
I didn't want this book to end, mainly because I knew how it was going to end. Still, my impression of Norma Jean, Marilyn, Magda, Cherie, whoever she was at any given time, definately changed. She became a real person with real issues. Putting her addictions aside, which were a tool of the studio, she really was just a regular dysfunctional person. Nobody is perfect. Her start in life was chaotic, so why shouldn't her life be. My heart broke for her at certain points. Imagine what she would hav...more
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Kelly
05/28/08

recommends it for: Anyone who's in the mood for a racy read
This book is well worth reading. There are over 60 biographies on Monroe but none have captured her true history like this FICTIONAL BIOGRAPHY. Oates uses facts and blurs them with fiction in order to give the reader an understanding of Monroe's psychology as a product of American industry, namely the STUDIO. It weaves in conspiracy theory to keep the story exciting and allows the reader to continually question "what if?"Monroe's ghostly figure, with her white hair, white skin, blank s...more
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Indra
07/17/08

Read in July, 2008
This book frustrated me, made me think, moved me, creeped me out, and had passages that were quotable, all at once.I am a fan of Marilyn Monroe's movies and have read many books about her over the years, but this fictionalization packed more of a wallop than any "real" story of her life. JCO is obviously a talented and lauded writer, but I have found her work inconsistent and just a tad too steeped in creepy sexual energy. For this subject, it worked. I feel changed by this book. It...more
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Katy
01/04/08

Read in April, 2005
recommended to Katy by: bought it after Oates reading
This monster took me over a month to read (around 800 pages), and I also left it in my hotel room in Calgary in 2005 and it took a couple of weeks to get it back. I noticed that Oates began use the ampersand (&) instead of the word 'and' about halfway through. I thought it was a literary device at first, but my suspicion now is that it was to save space. The book was good. Despite its length, I never found it cumbersome or laborious. It was easy to split my time between that and other books....more
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Andrea
10/23/07

Read in January, 2004
So much has been written about the life and death of Marilyn Monroe, much of it specualtion and sensationalism. I am willing to bet this is the best fictional non-fiction account of her life. It really delves into the historical details of her life from childhood to adulthood, and it also offers a realistic, not Hollywood look into her thoughts and emotions. It's a long read, but it goes by very fast. After reading it, I just wanted to find out more about Marilyn. I rented all of these tv d...more
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Alexis
05/25/08

Joyce Carol Oates writes like an 8 course French meal.....so full, so rich, so satisfying, that you think the end will never come; you don't want the end to come.
Her writing style envelopes you and has the ability to impact your life; her words, her prose enters your bloodstream, becoming a part of you internally.

Blonde is one magnificent story...a story that could only have been written by the hand of someone who knew her; the next door neighbor who sits on the front porch all day long, only...more
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Kayefex
A biography of Marilyn Monroe written by Joyce Carol Oates? Impossible! It's like an oxymoron. But, it's true. Marilyn was so much more than just a blonde or just a starlet. Cmon, both Joe DiMaggio AND Arthur Miller married the woman. And Joe DiMaggio made sure that there would be fresh flowers on Marilyn's grave forever. Forever! Not just for ten years or fifty years, but FOREVER! A woman who inspires that sort of thing must be fascinating. I found JCO's biography to be both factual and enterta...more
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Mary Ann
Read in January, 2008
This is Marilyn Monroe's story, quasi fictionalized, with an amazing deep-seated empathy for the actress and her heart and soul. She really wanted to be a SERIOUS actress more than anything in the world. And she was talented. She owned almost no nice clothing--her dresses were owned by the studio--and had little money of her own. In fact, her whole life was not really her own. J.C. Oates brings this out..this book will tear at your heartstrings and help you to understand the woman and the u...more
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Jen
Jen is currently reading it (review of isbn 006093493X)
08/11/08

bookshelves: currently-reading
well, i've been wanting to read this book for a while. i've had it for a few weeks now, and have only made it through the first few chapters. it's a DOOZY. intimidating in size, and of course it's typical Joyce (who i do love). my goal is to finish it by summers end, but so far i'm having a hard time really getting into it. it's been sitting pretty by my bedside, just begging to be read, but instead i keep picking up the last Harry Potter and re-reading that instead. i need to get motivated. i'l...more
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Abbey
10/29/07

bookshelves: own
Read in October, 2007
Blonde is a semi-fictional account of the life of Marilyn Monroe, and it is really a tragic story. It drifts from dialogue to dreams to the thoughts of Monroe and others, and all of those aspects are woven together in an intriguing, sometimes-hard-to-follow way. The only drawback is that, though the plot is generally based on facts, you can't be certain which aspects of it are fictional, and it really left me wondering. I have to that by the end (700 pp. in), I was fading a little, but it reall...more
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Brianna
Read in December, 2007
This 700 page book took me a long time to get through, but I was never bored. If anything, JCO built up the suspense and tension so that toward the end I was barreling through it. Her writing style is more poetry and prose, so sometimes I has a hard time sifting through the pages, and sometimes I was caught up in how she put things. Mostly though, it's made me fascinated by Marilyn. Her portrayal of her was so human and so disturbing. This book is very dark, but very worth it.
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Tiffany
Read in June, 2007
joyce carol oates is BRILLIANT but unfortunately, as it is with most full biographies, blonde is much too exhausting. her ability to capture (fictionally or not) the whirlwind spirit of norma jeane is so incredible that there are often moments that take your breath away just by sheer brevity. however, as i'm sure it was in reality as well, it is SO tiring living the life of norma jeane living the life of marilyn monroe. i give up!
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.89 (716 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 0.00 (0 ratings)
number of reviews: 98






other editions

Blonde (Paperback)
Blonde: A Novel (Paperback)
Blonde (Hardcover)