book data
53360 ratings, 4.04 average rating, 7019 reviews
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published
September 4th 2002
by Farrar, Straus and Giroux
binding
Hardcover, 544 pages
literary awards
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (2003)
isbn
0374199698
(isbn13: 9780374199692)
description
"I was born twice: first, as a baby girl, on a remarkably smogless Detroit day in January of 1960; and then again, as a teenage boy, in an emerge...more
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| The Book Challenge: * *A-Z Title Challenge* | 73 | 498 | 1 day ago, 09:16PM | |
| Middlesex - why can't I enjoy this book? | 79 | 1119 | 7 days ago, 06:29PM | |
| 1001 Books You M...: VOTE FOR WINTER LINE UP | 52 | 310 | 16 days ago, 07:44AM | |
| 100+ Book Challenge: Anya's 100 in 2008 | 3 | 73 | 10/30/2008 03:44AM |
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 71295)
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5 stars (20212)
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4 stars (19869)
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3 stars (9235)
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2 stars (2794)
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1 star (1106)
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avg 4.04
bookshelves:
fiction
Read in July, 2003
I got off the bus from Bumbershoot around 1 AM, exhausted. Convinced that even the cars speeding past my window couldn’t keep me from this night’s rest, I opened the door to a stench of exceptional vileness. Not a dead stench, or a spoiled food stench. This was the stench of sewage. From a spot in the center of the living room I surveyed the apartment and discovered the source: the commode and the area around it were covered in yuck. I dialed up the landlord. The exchange went somethin...more
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(69 people liked it)
5 comments
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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(21 people liked it)
13 comments
Read in July, 2007
Don't judge a book by its cover.
I'd seen this book on the shelves of a number of friends and in the arms of a number of travelers, so I decided to pick it up. The title, "Middlesex", suggested English countryside to me. On the cover was what looked like a steamship, and a quote on the back began "Part Tristram Shanty, part-Ishmael..." So I came to the foolish conclusion that this was some 19th century English seafaring novel. (Typical.)
I couldn't have been more wro...more
I'd seen this book on the shelves of a number of friends and in the arms of a number of travelers, so I decided to pick it up. The title, "Middlesex", suggested English countryside to me. On the cover was what looked like a steamship, and a quote on the back began "Part Tristram Shanty, part-Ishmael..." So I came to the foolish conclusion that this was some 19th century English seafaring novel. (Typical.)
I couldn't have been more wro...more
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(19 people liked it)
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Read in May, 2008
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com:]. I am the original author of this essay, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted here illegally.)
The CCLaP 100: In which I read a hundred so-called "classics" for the first time, then write reports on whether or not they deserve the label
Book #15: Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides (2002)
The story in a nutshell:
The tale of "the most famous hermaphro...more
The CCLaP 100: In which I read a hundred so-called "classics" for the first time, then write reports on whether or not they deserve the label
Book #15: Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides (2002)
The story in a nutshell:
The tale of "the most famous hermaphro...more
Like this review?
yes
(12 people liked it)
2 comments
Read in September, 2007
Would have given this book two more stars except for one resounding disappointment I can't get past. I thought that one of the most important aspects of the book was entirely skipped over by the author without any explanation.
*Spoiler Alert* It's probably not a spoiler, but what I have to say may alleviate some of the intrigue - you have been warned.
I really, really, really wanted to know why Calliope 'chose' to live life as Cal once she learned that she was a biological male. It wa...more
*Spoiler Alert* It's probably not a spoiler, but what I have to say may alleviate some of the intrigue - you have been warned.
I really, really, really wanted to know why Calliope 'chose' to live life as Cal once she learned that she was a biological male. It wa...more
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(13 people liked it)
8 comments
Read in July, 2007
"When I told my life story to Dr. Luce, the place where he invariably got interested was when I came to Clementine Stark. Luce didn't care about criminally smitten grandparents or silkworm boxes or serenading clarinets. To a certain extent, I understand. I even agree."
I agree too. This quote comes from page 263 and is really where the story picks up and gets into the subject the book promises--Cal's life as a hermaphrodite. Honestly, while the first 263 pages were interesti...more
I agree too. This quote comes from page 263 and is really where the story picks up and gets into the subject the book promises--Cal's life as a hermaphrodite. Honestly, while the first 263 pages were interesti...more
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bookshelves:
family-drama,
gay-lesbian-different,
modern-fiction,
north-american,
psychological-drama
Read in February, 2008
I'm torn on this book. On the one hand, I loved the story, which is, as another reviewer put it, 'the greatest, most incestuous Greek epic since the Iliad'. On the other hand, I had serious problems with some of the writing. I haven't seen my quibbles mentioned anywhere else, so I guess I'm alone on them. Or am I?
In a nutshell, Middlesex is the story of Cal, a Greek American who was born a hermaphrodite and raised as a girl before finally realising he was boy as a teenager. In ...more
In a nutshell, Middlesex is the story of Cal, a Greek American who was born a hermaphrodite and raised as a girl before finally realising he was boy as a teenager. In ...more
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3 comments
bookshelves:
borrow-ed-or-ing,
buy,
desert-island-picks,
favorites,
fiction,
recommended
Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone with an open mind, and even some of those with closed ones.
Mr. Eugenides can do everything, or at least I am convinced of such after reading Middlesex.
I passed on this book for a long time. I kept picking it up in bookstores and putting it down. I've seen quotes from it everywhere, all of which were beautiful, and kept hearing wonderful things about it from friends. To be perfectly honest, what kept me from picking it up in the subject: a hermaphrodite. I think of myself as someone with an open mind, but the thing is that I just wasn't sure i...more
I passed on this book for a long time. I kept picking it up in bookstores and putting it down. I've seen quotes from it everywhere, all of which were beautiful, and kept hearing wonderful things about it from friends. To be perfectly honest, what kept me from picking it up in the subject: a hermaphrodite. I think of myself as someone with an open mind, but the thing is that I just wasn't sure i...more
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(7 people liked it)
6 comments
bookshelves:
contemporary
Read in April, 2008
This book has all the major players....
Incest, war, teenage girl-on-girl experimental sex, deadheads, undescended testes, and a 2 inch penis.
Yep, it took me all of one chapter to realize that Middlesex was referring to something besides a county in England.
Best Part: Answering Maurice's question "What's that about?" then watching him squirm and cross his legs in obvious pain.
Worst Part: Glaring Oprah sticker on the cover telling me I'...more
Incest, war, teenage girl-on-girl experimental sex, deadheads, undescended testes, and a 2 inch penis.
Yep, it took me all of one chapter to realize that Middlesex was referring to something besides a county in England.
Best Part: Answering Maurice's question "What's that about?" then watching him squirm and cross his legs in obvious pain.
Worst Part: Glaring Oprah sticker on the cover telling me I'...more
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(6 people liked it)
10 comments
recommends it for:
Oprah fans, Avid readers
Jeffrey Eugenides uses Calliope as his Muse – according to the Greek mythology, she’s the Muse of epic poetry –, as a narrator of his story. He must be a fan of the Greek myths as the novel’s full of allusion to Homer and the Illiad. The narrator eloquently unfold the story behind Calliope’s transformation, like the Chinese Princess Si Ling-Chi, as Eugenides puts it: upon discovering the unraveling of a silkworm cocoon that fell into her teacup, handing its loose end to her maidservant...more
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bookshelves:
fiction
Read in July, 2007
Calliope Stephanides, menjalani kehidupannya selama 14 tahun sebagai seorang perempuan. Ia tidka menyadari ada keanehan dalam dirinya, sampai ketika ia beranjak dewasa, ia menyadari dirinya berbeda dengan teman-teman perempuan lainnya. Di usia dua belas tahun, ia belum mendapatkan menstruasi, berdada rata dan bertubuh lebih kurus dan jangkung. Di atas bibirnya, mulai ditumbuhi rambut tipis. Dan, ia lebih cenderung menyukai teman perempuan dibanding laki-laki. Keluarganya, terutama ibunya, Tessie...more
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bookshelves:
audiobooks-ive-heard
recommends it for: audiobook lovers
Read in May, 2008
recommended to Stacey by:
audible.com reviewsrecommends it for: audiobook lovers
I've read quite a few reviews of this book saying that it was patchy in places, or it bogged down in the historical parts, the character not being believable in others, etc.
I have not read the novel, so perhaps this is true. As an audiobook however, it was magnificent. The story was compelling, the history inseparable from the development of Calliope, and the voice of the reader - Kristoffer Tabori - was genius. His character variations made an interesting concept into a fascinating narrati...more
I have not read the novel, so perhaps this is true. As an audiobook however, it was magnificent. The story was compelling, the history inseparable from the development of Calliope, and the voice of the reader - Kristoffer Tabori - was genius. His character variations made an interesting concept into a fascinating narrati...more
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(4 people liked it)
3 comments
bookshelves:
fall_reading_challenge,
general-fiction
Read in September, 2008
"So, what's going on, wha hoppen, I don't understand, I thought we were giving this 5 stars?" "Yah, I thought maybe we would, early on, but we're not." "We're not? What's wrong? I thought you loved the book!" "I did! There's just--there's some problems in the later part. There's a structural problem, it affects the linearity, there's a broken-back feel once we shift to--" Oh you and your 'linear', always with the linear nonsense, don't be so male, t...more
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2 comments
I should probably reread this. I should definitely explain the two stars, especially since the first half or so of this book, the sections set before the birth of the "main" character" really engaged me. OK, I'm really tired of the family-secrets-will-out-and-in-really-fucking-unexpected-ways theme...but Eugenides hooked me for a long while and I didn't mind. But the last section of the book, the section that made it "controversial" (yawn) bored and annoyed me. (Real...more
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recommends it for:
People who love to breath.
Okay, seriously: I loved this book. It was big sweeping, heartfelt, funny, sad, it had everything you could want in a book, or hell even a lifetime. I wanted to read it forever and ever (but then none of the other books would get to play).
I’m not kidding when I say, “You should read this book.” And yeah, I’m talking to you, the red head.
I know, it’s not like I’m going out on a limb here. It won the Pulitzer. It won best book of 2002 from The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Trib...more
I’m not kidding when I say, “You should read this book.” And yeah, I’m talking to you, the red head.
I know, it’s not like I’m going out on a limb here. It won the Pulitzer. It won best book of 2002 from The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Trib...more
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(3 people liked it)
1 comment
07/31/08
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