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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1.0 out of 5 stars
Turgid,
This review is from: The Flounder (Paperback)
There is no doubt that this book is well written. Grass clearly demonstrated his literary abilities in The Tin Drum, but this book is so hard to plough through, I couldn't even finish it. I also found it annoyingly misogynistic. The most annoying thing about it is that there are lots of interesting ideas, and gripping parts, but the constant change from theme to theme and character to character with no logical thread makes this very hard to read.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Talking fish,the Baltic in the Stone Age,and a revolutionary feminist tribunal-just another Grass novel.,
By PygmyTwylyte (Citizen of the world) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Flounder (Paperback)
It's a sprawling story,loosely divided into 9 parts,each one marking a month of the narrator's wife's pregnancy,and also the lives of nine women who lived in the Danzig/Gdansk area,starting from the end of the Ice Ages.
Into this,Grass also adds a talking fish,The Flounder,who has observed life on the Baltic coast for this time,and has advised and criticised both men and women over this age.The flounder is of ccourse the fish from the fairy story"The Fisherman's Wife". The novel evolves into a very funny and well-written account of the relationship between men and women over the ages,from Stone Age matriarchy to a feminist tribunal judging the Flounder in 1970s West Berlin.Add in some poetry,a side-trip to India and making a TV documentary about restoring Baltic architecture(amongst other things)and you have one of Grass's best novels.Highly recommended.
2 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Grass has never grown greener.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Flounder (Paperback)
As Milton Schtoigl the great beat poet once said ' A foreign aspect; a new way of viewing home', this is the joy of The Flounder. Originally written in German, this delightfully witty and incredibly inventive book vaults over the translation barrier with gay abandon. Experience a foreign aspect on food, fairy tales and friendship. Experience The Flounder.
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