Absurdistan (na finskom jazyke).

by Gary Shteyngart
Absurdistan (na finskom jazyke).
book data
3,837 ratings, 3.25 average rating, 813 reviews (more data...)
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published
2007 by Like (Helsinki) (first published 2006)

details
Hardcover

characters

setting
United States

isbn
9524719223    (isbn13: 9789524719223)

description
From the critically acclaimed, bestselling author of The Russian Debutante's Handbook comes the uproarious and poignant story of one very fat man and …more


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Jack
Aug 03, 2008
Jack rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

I finished this book only because I paid full price for it. It was not funny and the self-absorption of the main character, Misha, was tiresome to say the least. Repetitious sex, gluttonous eating and lame political satire do not make a funny book. I hated this book, and feel absurd for having read the entire thing. Maybe I missed the point, some political and cultural satire, but I cannot believe its cover blurbs that cite so many newspapers naming it among their top ten books of the year.
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Ed
Aug 30, 2007
Ed rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

bookshelves: popularstuff
Read in January, 2007
recommends it for: the political activist that burbles and groans just under the surface of your skin
This struggles only in how it starts and how it ends. Now I don't need a bow, ribbon, road signs, and a pat on the head when I read, but he soapboxed his way through this allegory, and it needed something firmer coming out the other side. It blurs at the edges and you're left nowhere when you spent all this time grounded in a very specific, real "somewhere." If you put in all that effort to bring us with you, keeping us tightly wrapped in this "Iraq" stand-in, you can't just ...more
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Cam
Aug 17, 2007
Cam rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400061962)

This disaster of a book is as senselessly profane as it is painful to read. While surely some measure of artistry was necessary to have stretched such an uninspired satire into 333-pages of filth, only a true dullard would find occasion to be impressed.

Shteyngart's aptly titled story of Absurdistan is told from the perspective of a morbidly obese pig-man who possesses the intellect of a lobotomized chihuahua. This vacuous ogre of a protagonist, Misha Vainberg, dawdles away life b...more
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Jeffrey
Aug 01, 2007
Jeffrey rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in August, 2007
Absurdistan is a few different novels at once. Along the way Gary Shteyngart uses sex, drugs, and violence to present constant dicotomies of pleasure and pain, and hope and despair. There are quite a few sex scenes that are kinky in a humorous and even strangely endearing way. And then there is sex that is the sort only offered or taken part in because of desperation and despair. These moments are nauseating. There is a very entertaining drug scene in which the protagonist, Vainberg, is ve...more
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Dave-O
Jul 13, 2007
Dave-O rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in May, 2007
"Absurdistan" is a very self-aware book. This hybrid of "A Confederacy of Dunces" and "Fight Club" the book is calculated and scathing in its language. With one swipe, Gary Shteyngart brings hipsters, academics, politicians, MBAs, history and consumerism to a palatable middle-brow level. Which is just where the 300 pound anti-hero Misha needs them to be.

At its best "Absurdistan" is clever to the nth degree. Misha sees the world as it is, stripp...more
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Tommy
Dec 06, 2007
Tommy rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in August, 2007
recommends it for: silly people
Fat Russian explores the Middle East a la Confederacy of Dunces, except not quite as charming and a bit more overbearing. Bits with Brooklyn fling quite comical; most other parts too heavy-handed to be laughable.
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Daniel
Oct 25, 2007
Daniel rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: people who like reality TV and schedenfreude.
There's satire and then there's books in which everybody is horrible. "Absurdistan" is one of the latter, I think. It's about Misha, an emotionally crippled, morbidly obese Russian oligarch who wants only to move to New York to be with his girlfriend. He can't though, since his obese Russian oligarch father once killed an Oklahoma businessman and now the INS won't give Misha a visa. His quest for a US visa brings him from Russia to Absurdistan, the (made-up) pearl of the Caspian Sea...more
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hanna
Aug 22, 2007
hanna rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400061962)

two probelms:
jerry shteynfarb and the russian arriviste's hand job? this is your second novel dude. you are way too young to get all vonnegut and come up with a kilgore trout alter ego, with a self-deprecatingly mocking title for a novel.

okay, so the entire book predates september 11, and deals with america muddling foreign affairs. but terrorism, not really. i'm not sure that it works, or makes sense, and almost seems like a cheap way to give the novel more weight. with t...more
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Joe Arencibia
Read in January, 2007
Good political and social satire makes you look at the world a little differently, with some laughs along the way. This did not.

For the life of me, I can't figure out why this book got such critical acclaim. The humor was cheap and obvious (although sometimes actually funny) and I couldn't help feeling like Shteyngart robbed his main character from A Confederacy of Dunces, only without the keen ability to actually develop the character like Toole had (RIP).

The most ...more
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Mike
Jan 06, 2008
Mike rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in September, 2007
This was a really odd book. “Absurdistan” is about Misha Vainberg, a big, fat, spoiled Russian in his late 20s who is trapped in Russia. He’s stuck there with his girlfriend Rouenna, a largish black stripper from Harlem and his best friend Alyosha-Bob who isn’t Russian but kind of pretends to be. Misha yearns to go back to the US where he attended Accidental College and had himself a botched circumcision. He’s trapped in Russia because his father, who is now dead, killed an Okl...more
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Stuart Ross
Oct 23, 2007
Stuart Ross rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in September, 2006
"At Accidental College, we were taught that our dreams and our beliefs were all that mattered, that the world would eventually sway to our will, fall in step with our goodness, swoon right into our delicate white arms. All those Introduction to Striptease classes (apparently each of our ridiculous bodies had been made perfect in its own way), all those Advanced Memoir seminars, all those symposiums on Overcoming Shyness and Facilitating Self-Expression. And it wasn't just Accidental College...more
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Daniel
Apr 25, 2007
Daniel rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Brief summary:

Vainberg, a rotund, melancholic Russian man, lives a life of misadventure. Haunted by his bygone days as an American college student, he frequently recalls attending "Accidental College" (aka Oberlin) where he studied Multiculturalism. The main character from "The Russian Debutante's Handbook" makes a cameo appearance, shared with the author himself - ("Shteynfarb"). But Vainberg wastes no love on either, for he is trapped in the former USS...more
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M  F
Aug 14, 2007
M F rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1400061962)

Read in February, 2007
recommends it for: those in need of a hearty laugh
This is laugh-out-loud hilarious, by which I mean that it literally caused me to guffaw audibly in public. Second novels are often disappointing, but this one was insightful, incisive, and timely.

Shteyngart skewers just about every ethnic group and political ideology in this whirlwind farce, and it's impossible to put down. A great airplane read, and the short chapters also make it suitable for a subway commute.

I will say this, though -- I love to read about food, and...more
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Erin
Dec 06, 2008
Erin rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in November, 2008
recommended to Erin by: It was a gift from Doug!
An obese Russian gentleman with an unhealthy affection for the United States is not allowed to return to his beloved home in the Bronx because his mafioso father killed an Oklahoman so his son would not be allowed back into the US. There you have it. This book is marketed as a satire, and unfortunately, I was unable to make all the connections. The main character seems to represent the capitalism and overwhelming consumption food, sex, expensive hotels, and the capacity to purchase friends. ...more
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Summer
Feb 04, 2009
Summer rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in February, 2009
I was given this as a gift by my brother's ex-girlfriend a year and a half ago. I think my guilt over not reading it before now made me persevere.

Somehow I finished the book, despite being equally repulsed and bored by it. I really did appreciate Shteyngart's use of language, which is why I have opted for two stars rather than one. I know that this is classified as a satire, but I felt that Shteyngart was making his characters such irritating cliches that I wanted to commit viol...more
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Morgan
Jun 08, 2008
Morgan rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in June, 2008
Really, it boils down to the fact that this was just a boring wank-a-thon. Boring. As shit. I can see how people would be impressed with this book though, since Shteyngart can emulate all of the writing styles of every single polular Russian writer of the past two centuries. Ok, dude, I get it, you can write like Tolstoy and Nabokov, I get it. However, if you're trying to impress me with that junk, it's a wasted gesture, since the people that get it are the same people who have already read Dost...more
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Daniel
Apr 17, 2008
Daniel rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

bookshelves: have-read, literature
Read in August, 2008
According to the New York Times, this is one of the ten best books of the year. What a sad year for literature was 2007!

I wanted very much to like this, and there were moments when I smiled at a phrase or passage or even a bit of biting satire, but over-all this was nothing more than literary masturbation ... an author trying to show off how clever he is rather than actually engaging a reader in a story. And, quite frankly, the story doesn't even begin until nearly a third of the w...more
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Cyrus
Jan 20, 2008
Cyrus rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: obese secular russian jews who listen to hip hop, just about anyone

I thoroughly enjoyed this tongue-in-cheek, satirical coming of age tale, though it was good for different reasons than I had expected. The political satire in the book deals with the nature of geopolitics in the age of oil addiction, terrorism and a vacuum in the sort of global stability that existed in the stalemate of the cold war. I was expecting this book to be a send up of the logic of nation building, war for oil and the related issues that are so deadly important in the world no...more
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Chris
Apr 03, 2007
Chris rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

bookshelves: abandoned, disapointing
The review in the Times and the interviews I heard on NPR made me want to rush out and buy the hard-cover, but I waited, and now the paper-back is out.

Good thing I waited, as I had to force myself to finish the first four chapters. I like to give a book a chance, give it 50 pages or so before I give up on it, but honestly I started skimming around page 35 or so. The tone is so forced, so self-consciously modern and hip, the narrator so annoying, that I had to check the cover to m...more
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Eveline
Apr 14, 2008
Eveline rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0812971671)

Read in March, 2008
i loved "the russian debutante's handbook" because it was really clever but in what felt like an effortless way. i didn't like this much because it was also definitely super clever, but in a way that to me exerted a lot of effort. too contrived i guess.

howevs, like the other book, this book had some lines that were so great that i had to transcribe them:

Who cared about literature, anyway? Petroleum and hip-hop were the topics of my generation.

She looked u...more
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