Beasts (Otto Penzler Books)
by Joyce Carol Oates
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Read in July, 2003
Joyce Carol Oates, Beasts (Carroll and Graf, 2002)
Joyce Carol Oates cannot be human.
It is simply impossible for a single human being to turn out the work she has over the course of her career, consistently stratospheric in both quality and quantity. Her thirty-year bibliography is so vast that the major internet repository of Oates research and criticism doesn't have a full list anywhere, but is now a searchable database. Another admittedly incomplete bibliography on the web lists eighty-nin...more
Joyce Carol Oates cannot be human.
It is simply impossible for a single human being to turn out the work she has over the course of her career, consistently stratospheric in both quality and quantity. Her thirty-year bibliography is so vast that the major internet repository of Oates research and criticism doesn't have a full list anywhere, but is now a searchable database. Another admittedly incomplete bibliography on the web lists eighty-nin...more
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Read in June, 2008
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Read in June, 2008
In Beasts, Oates explores the underbelly of a common before-bed/during-class fantasy: that of being seduced, admired, respected by a professor. In this case the greasy yet intoxicating Professor Andre Harrow is joined in his frequent seductions by his part French wife, Dorcus, a jealous green parrot, and a host of date-rape drugs. Oates chooses as her protagonist a modern Philomela, who cannot speak because a man has cut out her tongue, yet who gains freedom and adulthood through an apposite r...more
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Read in March, 2008
The first few pages of this book (3 to be exact) set an ominous tone that persists up until the very end. An uncomfortable moment in the Louvre where a primitive, grotesque totem is an odd reminder of the deaths of two loved ones (horrible deaths presumed to be accidental)...'presumed' being a key word, it turns out. The main character, a young post-grad student, goes on to say that the following "is not a confession" as we will see that she has nothing to confess (I immediately assume...more
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Read in January, 2008
In finishing the novella, I remain wholly unenthusiastic about its premise and conclusion. The characters were adequately developed: Gillian, Andre, and Dorcas made the [un?] holy trinity of main characters. The peripheral, secondary characters seemed heavy handed: Sybil? Marisa? ...They seemed written in as part of another story line that was never quite developed or integrated.
It's incidental to me that while the book takes place at a women's college, ostensibly among close friends, each a...more
It's incidental to me that while the book takes place at a women's college, ostensibly among close friends, each a...more
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Read in December, 2007
I found Beasts to be a disturbing combination of traditional Gothic horror and Clive Barker at his most vulgar. While Oates does not approach the graphic nature of Barker's writing, the innocence of her setting (a small, liberal arts college) and her protagonist (Gillian, a young, student at the college) makes the vulgarity all the more unsettling. The story itself moves rapidly and draws the reader into a shadowy world of deception, drugs, and sexual deviance, while simultaneously maintaining t...more
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Read in November, 2007
"Lawrence is the supreme poet of Eros. No recriminations, no reproaches, no guilt, no 'morality.' For what's 'morality' but a leash around the neck? A noose? What's 'morality' but what other people want you to do, for their own selfish, unstated purposes?...He tells us 'Love should be intense, individual,/Not boundless./This boundless love is like a bad smell."
It is interesting how the "what other eople want you to do for their own selfish, unstated purposes," plays out i...more
It is interesting how the "what other eople want you to do for their own selfish, unstated purposes," plays out i...more
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Read in May, 2008
I've never read anything by Joyce Carol Oates before, but I've always heard great things about her. I don't know how "Beasts" compares to her other work, but after reading it, I'm in no hurry to run out and buy more of her books.
"Beasts" is a novella--maybe even just a long short story--documenting the affair the narrator had with a professor and his wife when she was a college student. There's nothing particularly special about the story, nothing at all special about the...more
"Beasts" is a novella--maybe even just a long short story--documenting the affair the narrator had with a professor and his wife when she was a college student. There's nothing particularly special about the story, nothing at all special about the...more
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Read in January, 2006
recommends it for:
someone that wants something short and intense.
For some reason, I find a lot of inspiration for my own writing and photography in this book. I'm not quite sure why, but I suppose a lot of it has to deal with the intensity of emotions and the narrator. When I first read this, I was in a state that felt eerily familiar to the main character. I felt both lost and assured of my self in college and I felt a connection to the narrator's feelings, even if they were a tragic mess as the book progressed.
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
women who like twisted psychopathic love stories
I have been a Joyce Carol Oates fan forever, and "Beasts" is in her classic style. This dark story hooked me in the first paragraph, and I read voraciously to the last page. The book has a panicky feel to it and, as always, JCO is the master of character development. My paperback copy is signed by the author, when she was at the Seattle Library earlier this year.
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Read in February, 2008
This book was short and packed with all kinds of sex and violence. Not too shabby. While it's not the most disturbing thing Oates has written (there are short stories that have packed more punch for me) I still appreciated the portrayal of the time period and the 'bad guys' were creepily (real word?) realistic. Makes you grateful for a good writing workshop.
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Read in January, 2008
I'm not particularly nuts about Post-Modern literature, but this is just a pretty great read. The storyline is very compelling, and even though it's not particularly linear, it reads as if it is. I couldn't put it down, and would reccomend it to anyone who likes literary fiction and has to take a short flight real soon.
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Read in June, 2008
Oates, in addition to being blessed with a spectacular family name, is a great writer, and "Beasts" is an enjoyable and quick read. Though much of the conflict in the novella seems to be a direct consequence of the protagonist's incredibly poor judgment, Oates is able to evoke the uncanny with remarkably few words.
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If you read and loved Donna Tartt’s A Secret History, this book is right up your alley. It’s about a young college woman, infatuated with her professor and his lifestyle, who gets drawn into a world that’s seamier than she thought. It’s a short book, a good book.
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"Short, nightmarish tale of a university professor and his wife who exert a strange - and dangerous - fascination for the girls he teaches. I think the ultimate message of the book is that we are all beasts - but some of us are more beastly than others. [July 2005]"
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Read in August, 2007
This is the first book I've read by Joyce Carol Oates, and I find her writing to have a Sylvia Plath type of appeal. The plot of this novel is engaging, and though there is some vulgarity, I would urge most people to read this.
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I picked this up because it was in the "suggested reading for fall" section of the library. I give it two stars because it doesn't ramble on, and because it is a quick, easy way to dismiss reading other books by JC Oates.
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Read in June, 2008
The subject was a great deal more strange than I had imagined it would be. Just left me nowhere. But, I do like Joyce Carol Oates and will read other books just for kicks! After all, Lisa Simpson likes her!!!!!
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Read in January, 2008
A book of destruction and obsession. It wasn't as dark as I was expecting but there was just enough gothic charm and salaciousness to make it amusing enough that you will want to read it in one sitting.
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One of the thinnest but most well written books ever. JCO is a master at weaving the uncomfortable into the lyrical. This is a MUST read for every reader and writer.
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