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WHO WAS CHANGED AND WHO WAS DEAD by Barbara Comyns
By Lark · 26 posts · 22 views
By Lark · 26 posts · 22 views
last updated Oct 29, 2020 11:22AM
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I was going to start off by describing this as dream-like, but it's actually a nightmare.
The Earth is rapidly covering with ice, a death sentence for its inhabitants. Meanwhile, our unnamed male narrator in an unnamed country has an obsession with a woman from his past. He feels compelled to save her, not only from the ice, but also from her rather jerky husband, then later from the more sinister "warden".
What I assumed would be a relatively simple plot in relatively few pages, is actually diso ...more
The Earth is rapidly covering with ice, a death sentence for its inhabitants. Meanwhile, our unnamed male narrator in an unnamed country has an obsession with a woman from his past. He feels compelled to save her, not only from the ice, but also from her rather jerky husband, then later from the more sinister "warden".
What I assumed would be a relatively simple plot in relatively few pages, is actually diso ...more

2.5 stars
I finished this several days ago and have been thinking about how best to review it, but the answer is not presenting itself and the book is starting to fade in my memory.
So briefly: I can see why this book has some hardcore fans. It rushes along in a dazzling, breakneck way, and it hints at being about all sorts of things: climate change, nuclear war, heroin addiction, trauma and abuse. Perhaps the book’s refusal to settle on being an allegory for only one thing is the source of its po ...more
I finished this several days ago and have been thinking about how best to review it, but the answer is not presenting itself and the book is starting to fade in my memory.
So briefly: I can see why this book has some hardcore fans. It rushes along in a dazzling, breakneck way, and it hints at being about all sorts of things: climate change, nuclear war, heroin addiction, trauma and abuse. Perhaps the book’s refusal to settle on being an allegory for only one thing is the source of its po ...more

A short book that packs enormous punch.
This book gives a glimpse into Kavan's psyche, and it is a dark and suffocating place. Reading it reminded me of the Choose Your Own Adventure series I enjoyed as a kid - but a nightmarish, Kafkaesque version. The writing is wonderful. The content...quite terrifying.
It was totally haunting read and I know it will stick with me for a very long time. ...more
This book gives a glimpse into Kavan's psyche, and it is a dark and suffocating place. Reading it reminded me of the Choose Your Own Adventure series I enjoyed as a kid - but a nightmarish, Kafkaesque version. The writing is wonderful. The content...quite terrifying.
It was totally haunting read and I know it will stick with me for a very long time. ...more

While there is an apocalyptic event that is turning the world to ice, this did not feel like science fiction to me. The best description of the book can be found in the book itself when the narrator of the story says -- "I had a curious feeling that I was living on several planes simultaneously; the overlapping of these planes was confusing." That is exactly how I felt for the first 2/3s of the book. I was gritting my teeth and urging myself to read faster. But suddenly I got sucked into the flo
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This book is bonkers, in a good way. Kavan's final novel is part sci-fi allegory and part apocalyptic adventure story, structured as a recurring nightmare of obsession and addiction. It also has some meta-fictional elements in its examination of fractured identity.
It feels like ICE was written rather quickly, so for me it was more effective to read it quickly as well, and not get too caught up in strange punctuation and word choices in the writing.
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It feels like ICE was written rather quickly, so for me it was more effective to read it quickly as well, and not get too caught up in strange punctuation and word choices in the writing.
...more

My goodness. Not a good commute read, unless you like your commutes peppered with a sense of desolation. For three nights straight I kept on getting off the train, walking amongst masses of people, completely enraptured by this book, thinking only: there is no hope, the ice is coming, all this is destined for the whiteness of a cold death.
But what a great book. I can see why someone might think this pulp: it works with the simplest number of elements possible, and refuses to explain itself, as ...more
But what a great book. I can see why someone might think this pulp: it works with the simplest number of elements possible, and refuses to explain itself, as ...more

It's like a nightmare from which you cannot awake, and that keeps rolling back upon itself. Brilliant.
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Nov 06, 2015
Anna
marked it as to-read

Feb 10, 2016
Niels
marked it as to-read-someday

Nov 21, 2016
Viv JM
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Oct 29, 2017
Carol
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Dec 09, 2018
Laura
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Jan 14, 2019
Seana
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Jun 24, 2020
Tensy (bookdoyen)
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Sep 04, 2020
Walter Neto
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Dec 10, 2022
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Mar 11, 2024
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