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Barefoot in the Head
 
 

Barefoot in the Head [Kindle Edition]

Brian Aldiss
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Digital List Price: £7.71 What's this?
Print List Price: £13.00
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Product Description

The Listener

'...an extraordinary book - a dark, sombre, sustained vision...dense and powerful'

Product Description

'Everyone's touched! Don't be taken in by appearances here. Believe me, the old world has gone, but its shell remains in place. One day soon, there will come a breath of wind, a new messiah, the shell will crumple, and the kids will run, screaming, barefoot in the head, through lush new imaginary meadows. What a time to be young!'

Barefoot in the Head is a tale of a future world recovering from a holocaust of hallucinogenic chemical weapons. For the victims, reality is a fluid mixture of the real, the imaginary and the nightmarish, the past, present and future. Colin Charteris, the hero and anti-hero on this continually disintegrating stage, has not himself survived the cataclysm unscathed, and his gradual descent into fantastic and paranoid visions will have drastic consequences for civilization.

Brian Aldiss, in a psychedelic tour de force of inventive, playful narrative, owing as much to the methods of James Joyce and the experimentalism of William S. Burroughs as to H. G. Wells, goes light-years beyond the conventions of the genre to tell his story.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 534 KB
  • Print Length: 236 pages
  • Publisher: Faber Finds (4 Jun 2009)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B002RI9ZTU
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #178,761 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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More About the Author

Brian Wilson Aldiss
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Brian Aldiss is renowned as one of the great stylists of science fiction. His books are challenging and unconventional. This particular novel is one of the very few examples of stream-of-consciousness narrative being used in the genre. The plot deals with the Aftermath of the Acid-Head wars - when bombs with payloads of hallucinatory, mind-altering drugs were dropped on the populace of Europe. The disjointed, difficult writing style mirrors perfectly the themes and subject matter. Though written in the sixties it remains a topical, highly original and worthwhile read.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Yawnsome 4 Nov 2010
Format:Paperback
Dated and tedious, which is slightly worse than I thought when I tried to read it back in the early 70s. Nice idea but verbose and undynamic.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  4 reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Painful. Necessary. Essential. 23 Mar 2006
By flying-monkey - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Barefoot in the Head is one of the finest things to emerge from the wreckage of the 1960s.

It is not by any means an easy read, indeed it is far more experimental in forms and style that many more feted non-sf avant-garde works. The prose and poems (some of which individually are really fine pieces of work) and songs and at times simply patterns of letters that compose the work are fragmentary and fractured - the ravings of minds changed beyond recognition by mind-altering psychotropic weapons. Yet somehow it makes sense: the wrong words start to mean something, you start to establish a vocabulary from random or mistaken strings of words and, although how I am not quite sure, you can even get a deep sense of story and character thorugh all the confusion. At times you just have to sit back with a wry smile and know that Aldiss deserves so much more than to be continually ignored by the snobbish mainstream critics: this guy is a British national treasure, and one of the great writers of the late Twentieth Century in English. The degree of sheer literary craft involved in this work is quite remarkable.

This is a book about culture and religion and drugs and technology and war and so much more: as such it stands with Burroughs' Naked Lunch. Dick's A Scanner Darkly and Delaney's Dhalgren as monuments to the ambiguity of the breakdown of both mind and order and dark side of pure freedom. But somehow it is more adventurous and more daring than any of these works.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Wake the sleeping serpent 15 Mar 2000
By Pantagruel - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
After the Acidhead War, most of Earth's population is stumbling through an endless acid trip caused by nerve gas. Colin Charteris, in headlong flight from Serbia and the refugee camps where he was exposed, finds everyday objects like Metz cathedral ominous and portentous. A vision of the future catapults him into the company of more-advanced acid cases who call him a messiah for his concept of Man the Driver, resulting in his leading a mad exodus by car across a blasted Europe into a life of complete incomprehensibility. As birds build twisted nests, dogs wear neckties and the new animal slinks through the shrubbery, Charteris forges a new vision of reality, but drops out before the crucifixion. Inside every sane citizen is a madman waiting to run free....
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Low Point X 28 Mar 2000
By Wizard's Apprentice - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Wow, my brain hurts after reading this. I feel as if my whole civilization has fallen apart due to everyone tripping all the time. When they try to work the machines, men'll fall about laughing. The walls are melting, and I can't decide whether humanity is rotting alive in waves of indecision or poised on the verge of a breakthrough that will catapult us into a new, multi-valued way of perception. I think I just saw a dog wearing a tie. The knowledge that the plane is going to crash haunts me night and day, and I've developed a peculiar aversion to christmas cactus. You don't understand what I'm saying; you DO understand what I'm saying. Both are true, and neither. It's..it's like the SIXTIES: a tragic waste of brain cells AND a step into a new dimension. Aldiss and more...
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