Der Sammler.
by John Fowlespublished
November 1984
by Ullstein Taschenbuchvlg.
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binding
Broschiert
isbn
3548005942
(isbn13: 9783548005942)
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Read in September, 2007
Other things were supposed to be read first. But I'm finding I'm powerless in the grip of John Fowles.
I don't like scary stories, yet I keep reading.
I don't much like novels wherein almost all the characters are reprehensible, yet I keep reading.
I don't much like admiting that my boss is right about most things, yet I agree with him more and more each book.
What's most remarkable about The Collector is that for half the book I was totally unimpressed. The plot was engagin...more
I don't like scary stories, yet I keep reading.
I don't much like novels wherein almost all the characters are reprehensible, yet I keep reading.
I don't much like admiting that my boss is right about most things, yet I agree with him more and more each book.
What's most remarkable about The Collector is that for half the book I was totally unimpressed. The plot was engagin...more
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One of the most chilling books I’ve ever read, the story of an obsessive loner who kidnaps and keeps captive a young girl in the hope that one day she will love him as he loves her. It’s a bit schlocky in places, particularly the passages where Miranda is reminiscing about her past life, but the characters and claustrophobic tension of the situation are brilliantly realised. Although it lacks the gore and gruesome details of later serial killer books, for my money it’s far more disturbin...more
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bookshelves:
read-this-before-you-die
recommends it for:
Everyone with a brain!
This book first came to my attention randomly when I worked in a used book store, and it became one of those rare books I'll never let go of. It's the story of a rather dull, self-righteous, tedious British clerk whose only joys in life are collecting butterflies and keeping a close eye on a lovely art student he follows, yet has never met. When he wins the British equivalent of the lottery, he decides that he will add the girl (Miranda) to his collection.
The book is divided into three part...more
The book is divided into three part...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
psychological thriller fans
This was Fowle's first novel and is considered the first modern psychological thriller. A butterfly collector, "collects" his prize speciman, a beautiful art student. It's in two parts--the first is from the abductor's perspective; the second part is her journal kept secretly during her captivity. The book is truly chilling, in a Hitchcockian way. I read it as part of a seminar on the price of freedon and was surprised to discover that both parties lose and gain freedom during their...more
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Read in July, 2007
A tough book to rate: it's an easy four-star except for the (very long) section two, in which a daring POV switch from collector to prisoner becomes demoralizing once you flip ahead and realize that section re-narrates the entirety of the book up to that point. This is a rather big mistake (see quote below), yet it begins so well that I was actually willing to read 150+ pages thinking "this is a mistake, this is all a mistake" to get to the last ten pages back with the original narrat...more
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Read in May, 2004
One of the creepier books I've read. A man becomes obsessed with a younger woman, stalks her, and kidnaps her. It begins with the man speaking in first person, making him an almost sympathetic, almost normal-seeming character, except for the fact that he's got a freakish obsession with this woman. Gradually it becomes chillingly obvious how insane he is.
The second half of the book is Miranda's side of the story. It details her attempts to escape, how she tries to manipulate her captor into r...more
The second half of the book is Miranda's side of the story. It details her attempts to escape, how she tries to manipulate her captor into r...more
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Read in January, 2002
recommended to Aslilin by:
a professorrecommends it for: anyone who has read SIlence of the Lambs
An intriguing story, told by a 'collector'. A man who begins the story collecting insects, but quickly upgrades to abducting a young college student. Since he tells his story, he tries to convince the reader of his logic, of the reasons why he does what he does and often the reader can catch him as he decides to convince himself of a new lie. What starts as normal rapidly spirals into the abnormal and the reader is along for the ride.
Other parts of the story are told by the girl that is i...more
Other parts of the story are told by the girl that is i...more
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Read in September, 2007
This book was a welcome surprise. The kidnapping of a young woman is told from two perspectives; the stalker's, and then the victim's. Oddly (or perhaps naturally enough?) the stalker is the more interesting of the two. The girl is a product of being a fairly privileged art student, not full of any earth-shaking ideas (although she seems to think so), which makes her all the more realistic. She constantly strives to do the morally correct thing, while alternately scorning and protecting her ...more
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Read in November, 2007
A gripping, psychologically astute novel, part thriller, part metaphor with a stunningly bleak ending. Fowles plays with points of view and the reader's sympathy - there were moments when I truly felt sorry for the kidnapper and the jumped-up preciousness of Miranda began to grate. But it's still a quite frightening read. Interesting to see his interest with Shakespeare's The Tempest which he cites again throughout The Magus.
Thoroughly gripping and ultimately quite terrifying.
Thoroughly gripping and ultimately quite terrifying.
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Read in July, 2008
I read this short-ish novel all in one sitting, on the train to Yorkshire. As a way of experiencing the book, I highly recommend it. The intensity of Fowles two engrossing characters - the predator and the captured - is carried off with graceful brutality. The fact that he was able to enter two such diametrically opposed minds, while making a worthy comment on class, sex and art, is nothing short of amazing. I was completely riveted.
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Read in April, 2004
recommends it for:
loners, kidnappers
This does not nearly have the epic scope of The Magus, but it is engaging and a little haunting nonetheless. It is basically a story of a kidnapping, by a seemingly "normal" guy. It will hold your attention. It is also very British; there a lot of quaint scenes that involve tea time and names for terraces that Americans don't use, etc. It's not bad but The Magus is the better work, even though I read this one first.
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Anglophiles, Pysch-Thriller Fans,
Very creepy.. a quick read. I was dying to see how it turned out and now I am eager to see the film version to see if they changed the ending. Fowles uses an interesting if not completely original perspective shift that works well.
I'm not so eloquent at book reviews.. it was good, though not as good as Fowles' The Magus, which was much longer and... I guess I'll save it for that review.
I'm not so eloquent at book reviews.. it was good, though not as good as Fowles' The Magus, which was much longer and... I guess I'll save it for that review.
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creepy but so good. the voices of both characters and the girl's back story all weave together seamlessly.
creepy though. creepy.
creepy though. creepy.
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This book seems to command rave reviews and, honestly... I don't get it. It was depressing (as it was supposed to be), but also incredibly boring.
I wonder if I would have liked it more if I'd read it when it was first published in the 1960s. (Impossible, since I was born in the 1980s, but you get my point.) Since then, the trope of a beautiful girl kidnapped by a lonely man and kept in his basement has become well-worn, to the point of cliche. I couldn't summon up much interest in a s...more
I wonder if I would have liked it more if I'd read it when it was first published in the 1960s. (Impossible, since I was born in the 1980s, but you get my point.) Since then, the trope of a beautiful girl kidnapped by a lonely man and kept in his basement has become well-worn, to the point of cliche. I couldn't summon up much interest in a s...more
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Read in January, 1986
recommended to Kara by:
My father
This is my all-time favourite book. I suggested it 2 years ago for my old bookclub in Brisbane and everyone loved it!
Originally I was moping around the house and must have been around 13 years old. We used to own a bookstore and have always had tons of books. My father said to me, "OK, you want something good? Try this". This book has remained with me every since...
It's an easy read, though the story line is hard going as you hear from Frederick Clegg, a lonely and sad clerk wh...more
Originally I was moping around the house and must have been around 13 years old. We used to own a bookstore and have always had tons of books. My father said to me, "OK, you want something good? Try this". This book has remained with me every since...
It's an easy read, though the story line is hard going as you hear from Frederick Clegg, a lonely and sad clerk wh...more
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Read in May, 2006
I'm kind of not sure why I read this book. Not that it's bad, or anything, but it's fairly standard psycho-sexual sadist stuff. I know I saw a recommendation of it somewhere, and I can't really tell why anyone would bother to recommend it. I suppose it had more impact when it was first published in the '60s; sort of like The French Connection and how when I finally saw it I was bored, because it wasn't the '70s anymore and everyone after The French Connection copied The French Connection ...more
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Read in January, 2007
This is the first book I’ve read by John Fowles and based on The Collector I’ll probably read another. But not too soon. I have a ton of books waiting in line and this wasn’t so good that I was dying to read another by him, but I’ll get to that.
The story is about a man, Fred, that wins a substantial amount of money & uses it to keep Miranda, his obsession (who he kidnapped) locked away in his secret, hidden basement. The book is written so that the first half is from Fred’s per...more
The story is about a man, Fred, that wins a substantial amount of money & uses it to keep Miranda, his obsession (who he kidnapped) locked away in his secret, hidden basement. The book is written so that the first half is from Fred’s per...more
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I read this book back in 2001 and it really stayed in my memory not because of the plot, but because of the two polar opposite points of view - both views are so gripping. One of a self-indulgent collector of beauty and the other of a terrified claustrophobic unrelentless-where-there-is-a-will-there-is-a-way captive. I enjoy the counterpoint that is found in other popular books such as a Thousand Splendid Suns. It reveals the story in a more engaging way - like the group of blind men (or men in...more
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Read in January, 1968
recommended to Natalie by:
Angierecommends it for: Those who enjoy psychological thrillers
A good, eerie psychological thriller made all the more disturbing given the disappearance all too often of young females who are never heard from again. The writing is interesting and unique as the reader is able to hear the voice and mind of both the captor and the captive in different sections of the book. Rather than having to guess at Miranda's anger, fear and anquish, we are privy to her thoughts and emotions as her loathing for her captor overtakes her fear of him.
I read this back in...more
I read this back in...more
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