Jamestown: A Novel

by Matthew Sharpe
Jamestown: A Novel
book data
156 ratings, 3.28 average rating, 48 reviews (more data...)
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published
February 28th 2007 by Soft Skull Press

binding
Hardcover, 320 pages

characters

setting
The United States

isbn
1933368608    (isbn13: 9781933368603)

description
On the 400th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown, you won't want to confuse Matthew Sharpe's new novel by that name with the many commemorative h...more




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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 323)

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Jason Pettus
07/12/07
Jason Pettus rated it: 5 of 5 stars

Read in July, 2007
(Full review can be found at the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. IMPORTANT DISCLOSURE: I am personal friends with a number of staff members of Soft Skull Press, publishers of Jamestown, even to the extent of sometimes staying on their couches during past trips to New York. It should be kept in mind while reading this review.)

Is it just me, or has there been just a whole slew of high-profile, so-called "high literature" novels about the Apoca...more
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Jim
06/26/07
Jim rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in February, 2007
recommends it for: Absurdist fiction fiends
"Jamestown" is a wild, violent, mordantly hilarious retelling of how the first permanent English colony in the New World came into being and unlike the version extolled in countless middle-school textbooks, Matthew Sharpe doesn't gloss over its influence on those who were already there. Indeed, the Indians' perspective on the events of 400 years ago is what gives Sharpe's satire such ferocious bite.

Set in the indeterminably near future, a ragtag band of employees of the Ma...more
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Cheryl
05/31/08
Cheryl rated it: 3 of 5 stars

Read in June, 2008

It was an alright telling of the Jamestown story. There were interesting spins, such as warring sections of New York and idiosyncratic injections of motor vehicles and computers. It is in an unspecified post apocalyptic time period that could be any time period you would imagine (many think it is post-9/11 New York). There is a great deal of humor in Sharpe's writing; quite a lot of one line puns and quite a lot more descriptive sexual material. As the young Pocahontas was likely a ...more
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Nick
01/20/09
Nick rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in February, 2009
(From now on I'm going to try and tie in the appropriate music I listen to while reading a selected book.)

Hope, social commentary, a post-apocalyptic wasteland, black humor and raunchy humor...You will find all these things within these pages.

Recommended soundtrack to your reading experience:
Explosions in the Sky-All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone,
Ween or a Monty Python Soundtrack.
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Kevin
04/24/08
Kevin rated it: 4 of 5 stars

bookshelves: funny-stuff, weird-lit
I didn't know I could like any kind of "historical fiction" but this is some crazy shit. Sharpe has engineered a new kind of epic with alternating characters and language that's as tight and ready to burst as an overinflated tire. Almost a 5-star read, and maybe it could have been if I would have been better schooled in the Jamestown story (I did much of my studying up on the story after I was finished). This Pocahontas is maybe my favorite character in fiction so far this year. See my...more
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Jerah
09/27/07
Jerah rated it: 5 of 5 stars

Read in May, 2007
i already reviewd this book but the internets ate my goodreads account so here it is again.

i want to eat this book. funny, violent, post-annihilation cleverness.
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Malini
09/22/08
Malini rated it: 3 of 5 stars

Read in September, 2008
I read Jamestown for post-apocalyptic book club. It's definitely an interesting interpretation of the founding of Jamestown. It has a lot in common with other books that explore the cyclic nature of human history, like A Canticle for Leibowitz and Cloud Atlas. There was something genuine in the flippancy of Rolfe's and Pocahontas's attitudes, but it went a little too far for my taste. I think the novel would have been better balanced if Sharpe had given more face time to Stickboy or even some of...more
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Ben
06/08/08
Ben rated it: 4 of 5 stars

bookshelves: 2008
Read in June, 2008
Sporadically brilliant. I like it a ton, mostly because it's the closest thing I've found to a Barthelme novel/story that wasn't actually written by Barthelme. Reminded me quite a bit of "Cortes & Montezuma," in particular, and for reasons beyond the superficial associations.

I'll be very interested to see what he does next.

***

"All right let me take a guess as to what a guy like you could possibly want when you steal into my tent at midnight, giv...more
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Amber
07/02/09
Amber rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 015603171X)

Read in June, 2009
This book was not suspenseful, but it was the oddest book I have ever read, which kept me going.

The book was gross, absurd, violent, comedic, and even touching at times.

It gave me a new look on books and stirred a new interest in me about Indians and early colonization.

If the book had had more suspense it probably would have received a higher rating from me. I enjoy a page-turner.
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Emily
06/03/09
Emily rated it: 1 of 5 stars

this book is all about the most base of human urges - the bad ones. that's the whole focus. the world has been annihilated and everyone has turned to their instincts to survive... kind of like what we see on the news everyday - and definitely not what i'm looking for in my entertainment. if i wanted to read/listen/visualize evil people in my novels - i would just watch the news.
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Glenn
08/21/07
Glenn rated it: 3 of 5 stars

Read in July, 2007
Another recommendation from my weirdo friends, but another fruitful read nonetheless. The book was recommended due to it's highly scatalogical content, but what I found captivating was the painting of a picture without revealing all the details at once. Nothing was ever explained outright, but the picture nevertheless came into focus: specifically, a post "apocalyptic" world, where government as we know it has collapsed, replaced by tribal allegiances and a nasty, brutish and short l...more
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ian
06/28/08
ian rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Those four stars should be taken with four corresponding grains of salt. For each thing this book gets right, there's a lot that it doesn't. Characterization is spotty at best, and the plot itself affords only the weakest of structures. That the book is a "fantasia" on historical occurrences is an interesting conceit, but the fantastic elements seem loose, only mostly thought out, and gimmicky. However, Sharpe succeeds incredibly with his use of language to convey pathos, humor, depth ...more
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Danielle
07/03/09
Danielle rated it: 3 of 5 stars

I am still thinking about what to think about this book. I think three stars is the average of loving it/hating it/being pissed off by it in ways that were sometimes thought provoking and sometimes less so.
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Katie
07/08/07
Katie rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in July, 2007
I approached this novel with equal excitement and skepticism - the story/myth of Jamestown reimagined in the near-future? Sign me up. But. Would it be too clever and pomo? And sure, there are plenty of "clever" jokes I could do without, but the writing here is most often brilliant and fun and he knows when to pull back and balance the pomo cleverness with true insight and seriousness. Saunders-esque language, Shakespearean scenes of betrayal and bloodshed, Joycean sex-driven females (P...more
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Leeyanne
03/02/09
Leeyanne rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Post-apocalyptic retelling of Jamestown story. Sort of like George Saunders meets Mad Max. Love works by Soft Skull Press too.
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Alexis
08/19/07
Alexis rated it: 5 of 5 stars

So far I'm loving it. I put off reading it for so long because it's about a post-apocalyptic U.S. (and there's been a lot of that lately), but Sharpe is hilarious. He alternates between two characters, which sets a swift pace. The voice of Pocahontas is brilliant--teenager, wickedly smart--her pronouncements about the English language are enough to recommend the book.

"Oh English! How I love to write to you in English, even though it is so slow to do anything in English, be...more
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Deidra
02/09/08
Deidra rated it: 4 of 5 stars

What an odd book. After a breakdown of American society, people revert back to pre-colonial social structures, sending parties of men out to scout areas untouched by the apocalypse for supplies and resources. The story of the Jamestown settlement and the romance of Pocahontas and Rolfe is recounted in this bizarre setting, through email messages, telepathy and a wealth of other weird communications. History repeats itself (or didn't really happen) in this darkly humorous tale that reveals no mat...more
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Kate
09/24/07
fbuser822890160 rated it: 1 of 5 stars

I did not finish this book. I know it's received praise from all over the place, and it was the LBC's "Read This!" book from the summer, but I got half way through and still wasn't enjoying it.

I don't think the author did what he intended to do, I thought it was too clever by half and while parts were funny, mostly I found it annoying. I guess my sense of humor slips a little in his portrayal of the "Indians"--with the title JAMESTOWN, I wasn't sure if this wa...more
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Lisa
11/16/08
Lisa rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in December, 2008
Weird and smart and completely original, and just funny and raunchy enough to avoid pretension. I haven't had that much fun with a book for ages.
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Mark
07/11/07
Mark rated it: 3 of 5 stars

A little too jumpy so far. I like the nod to As I Lay Dying,'s structure, but I'm not sure he pulls it off.

***

I'm almost done--the voices are too similar. There were many times when I thought I was reading Johnny Rolfe's section but I was really reading Pocahontas's section. That being said--I loved this book. Very creative and different, reminds me, in the very best way, of an excellent Barthleme piece.
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