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Krippendorf's Tribe [Paperback]

Frank Parkin


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Frank Parkin
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Synopsis

A satirical novel about a pedantic North London anthropologist and house-husband. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  6 reviews
Bad science, but great TV 8 Jun 2011
By KnC Books - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
A science experiment gone terribly wrong, or a daring foray into reality TV? Frank Parkin takes time out from his straight sociology nonfiction to posit what happens when research goes searching.

"Krippendorf's Tribe" could be a script for the next network "reality" offering. OK, maybe its a little over the top for primetime, but certainly not by much!

While it may have been shocking to the sensibilities in the mid-1980's, Frank Parkin's novel would fit right in to the 'entertainment' values of today's jaded viewers. Is turning his family into a mythical tribe any more outlandish than making yourself at home with the Osborne's? Stranded schoolteachers in a quest to be the last survivor? Paris Hilton down on the farm?

While not badly written, "Krippendorf's Tribe" just didn't strike any chords with me. The characters are just a little too disassociated, distant not just from each other and themselves (which is kind of the point), but from the reader. I couldn't find anything to relate them to - and I have a wide range of relations!

Which I suppose would make it perfect for reality television. If you like Survivor of the Dancing Bachelorettes, this will be right up your alley.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Excellent book 12 April 2001
By "ahmadku" - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book is one of the best I have read this year. If you can find it, I would highly recommend it.

As for the story, it centers around James Krippendorf. He is a professor who has squandered all of his grant money and is forced to invent the Shelmikedmu tribe. This is where all similarities between the book and movie end. In the book, James receives a lucrative offer from Exotica, an "anthropological" journal which is tantamount to a magazine filled with the nude pictures one would see in National Geographic.

Krippendorf, to get some photos of Shelmikedmu females, seduces and photographs a number of women whom he becomes familiar with, including a babysitter and one of his son's classmates' mother. Throughout the entire book, while he is carrying out these schemes, his unruly children are creating a maelstrom of destruction around the house. Eventually, the children turn wild and start to live in a treehouse and adopt the Shelmikedmu's "customs". This leads to some interesting and hilarious complications.

The best part of this book by far is Krippendorf. The way he acts is reminiscent of Ignatius Reilly in "A Confederacy of Dunces" in that he sees nothing wrong with his behavior and nonchalantly accepts his childrens' overly unruly behavior. For example, when one of his sons shoots the neighbors' dog with a BB gun, instead of being mad, Krippendorf simply promises him a new gun if his son keeps quiet about it.

This book is definitely not for kids, due to its adult subject matter. Like a previous reviewer, I also find it curious that Disney would make a movie out of it.

1 of 3 people found the following review helpful
A black comedy mixing single fatherhood,anthro & cannibalism 10 Mar 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
A look at how an anthropologist who has read too many "Sunday Sport" newspapers raises his family. It is very funny but its subject matter rates at least an R. If you like Hunter S. Thompson's "Fear & Loathing", the movie "Heathers", or boundless British humor, go for it. You will enjoy it.

However, how Disney can possibly be making a movie of a book about National Geographic style pornography, cannibalism and the like is beyond me.

If you are a parent who is buying this book because you saw, or heard about the movie, please read it before giving it to any kid below the age of 17.


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