Have one to sell? Sell yours here
The Blood of the Lamb
 
 
Tell the Publisher!
I’d like to read this book on Kindle

Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.

The Blood of the Lamb [Mass Market Paperback]

Peter De Vries
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

Available from these sellers.


Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover --  
Paperback £9.50  
Mass Market Paperback, Oct 1982 --  
Audio, Cassette, Audiobook --  
Unknown Binding --  
Amazon.co.uk Trade-In Store
Did you know you can trade in your old books for an Amazon.co.uk Gift Card to spend on the things you want? Plus, get an extra £5 Gift Certificate when you trade in books worth £10 or more before June 30, 2012. Visit the Books Trade-In Store for more details.

Customers Who Viewed This Item Also Viewed


Product details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Viking Pr; Reissue edition (Oct 1982)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0140062971
  • ISBN-13: 978-0140062977
  • Product Dimensions: 19.3 x 12.4 x 1.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,671,863 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Peter De Vries
Discover books, learn about writers, and more.

Visit Amazon's Peter De Vries Page

Inside This Book (Learn More)
Browse and search another edition of this book.
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
Search inside this book:

Suggested Tags from Similar Products

 (What's this?)
Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product)
 
(15)
(11)
(9)

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Sell a Digital Version of This Book in the Kindle Store

If you are a publisher or author and hold the digital rights to a book, you can sell a digital version of it in our Kindle Store. Learn more

What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?


Customer Reviews

4 star
0
3 star
0
2 star
0
1 star
0
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By Sphex TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Mass Market Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Few novels include within their first dozen pages dialogue containing a plausible use of the phrase "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" - and fewer still are funny in the process. By the time the narrator's older brother is arguing about evolution with their Uncle Hans (an Iowa clergyman), Peter De Vries has already deftly sketched in the main characters of the Wanderhope household, and has set the sceptical tone for what will turn into a wonderful novel. The way in which Uncle Hans replies to Louie's question - "I am not impressed by big words" - gains him a moment of sympathy (after all, how many of us know what that phrase means?), which is then dissolved by the acerbic observation that this is a man who is always ready to bandy around words like "predestination" and "infralapsarianism".

The comic tone is set early on as well, when we learn that Don Wanderhope's father had accidentally emigrated from Holland. This is also cosmically absurd: the way in which such an important decision - in which country, on which continent, to live - can turn on the merest chance (Ben Wanderhope couldn't face the return voyage because of a "ghastly seasickness"). Chance events, of course, often determine tragic outcomes - lives cut short - and De Vries goes on to tell a moving story of love and loss and the "vanity (if not outrage) of trying to cage this dance of atoms".

Among the many things that appealed to me was the emphasis on the commonplace, on "the list of pleasures to be extorted from Simple Things" and on the idea "that uppermost among human joys is the negative one of restoration: not going to the stars, but learning that one may stay where one is". This is couched in the narrator's intensely personal experience, but it's a lesson we can all profit from, without having to go through the trials and tribulations of Don Wanderhope.

A more overt statement of his philosophy of life is included by the device of a request from the editors of his college paper: "I believe that man must learn to live without those consolations called religious, which his own intelligence must by now have told him belong to the childhood of the race. Philosophy can really give us nothing permanent to believe either; it is too rich in answers, each canceling out the rest. The quest for Meaning is foredoomed. Human life 'means' nothing. But that is not to say it is not worth living. ... Man has only his own two feet to stand on, his own human trinity to see him through: Reason, Courage, and Grace. And the first plus the second equals the third."

This would come across as didactic if it appeared on the first page, but by the time I reached this passage in the novel the character of Don Wanderhope was largely drawn, and this detail emerged naturally out of the story. It also shows the versatility of Peter De Vries: he's an author who can move from serious reflection to the more absurd kind of observation, in a flowing style that is fully joined up and never tiresome. In pondering the mysteries of life and death, "of miracles supplanted by scientific fact as conducive to reverence as the miracles", the twelve-year-old Don Wanderhope returns to what his older brother had said: "I thought I understood now the helplessness of newborn babes: they were weak, not because they were infants or tiny, but because they had just got through recapitulating a billion years of evolution. Enough to tucker anybody out!"

(I first came across this novel when it was mentioned in passing by Austin Dacey during a lecture he was giving on blasphemy. It's no accident that the theme of secular sacred values that runs through the De Vries is also found in Dacey's two books: Secular Conscience: Why Belief Belongs in Public Life and The Future of Blasphemy: Speaking of the Sacred in an Age of Human Rights.)
Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  6 reviews
31 of 32 people found the following review helpful
A Book That Takes One's Breath Away 29 Dec 2001
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Peter De Vries's *Blood of the Lamb* is a novel of singular depth and humanity. De Vries was America's greatest humorist in the fifties and sixties, but in this work, he deals, from autobiographical experience, with his young daughter's struggle against leukemia. Overflowing with love, wit, fury, energy, and human grace, this book goes to the core of things. It ranks with the greatest works of 20th-century American literature, and it will surprise you. De Vries is best known for his great work for *The New Yorker* and for comedic novels (many made into films) rich in puns, the anatomy of absurdity, and the depredations and joys of libido....but *Blood of the Lamb* is his transcendent work. It's out of print now, and used copies are often hard to come by. It's an exceptional and humanizing experience. It is a moving sublimation of irredeemable tragedy.
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Humor, Drama, Spiritual Reflection, and Artistry. 7 Jun 2005
By Gabriel Bernstein - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Very pleased that the University Of Chicago Press has brought this book back into print. Now I can discard the looseleaf version that I photocopied from a friend and purchase this one. This is a poignant and funny book that, after reading you will never forget. Buy 3 or 4 copies of it, because you will want all your friends and relatives to read it too!
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
An Amazing Novel 7 July 2009
By J. C. Schaap - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Writers--like artists of other mediums--often say that no novel or short story is really ever finished until it's read. As an old novelist friend of mine used to say, great fiction is always a C, never an O--that is, it leaves some open space for readers, space for us to bring our own lives and experience into the work and make it real or whole or alive.

I finished Peter De Vries's Blood of the Lamb last night, for the second time. I read it initially sometime in the Sixties, four or five years after it was published, at a time in my life when I loved the irreverence he wields at his tribe--the Dutch Reformed people into which he and I were both born. De Vries mocked us but good, for our silliness and the sometime idiocy of our piety.

Peter De Vries was, in his time, among the most well read and beloved of American humorists, his novels--most of them at least--knee-slapping satires of American life. Google him sometime and read a few of his finest quotes; he can be absolutely hilarious.

There is humor in Blood of the Lamb too, Don Wanderhope and his father, aboard their garbage truck, slowly sinking like the Titanic into the primordial ooze of some Chicago-land refuse pit. Scared to death, they break out with--what else?--the doxology.

But far and away, Blood of the Lamb is not a funny novel--not at all, even though forty years ago, when I first read it, I thought it was a hoot. But then, I was a kid, a rebel chafing under the strictures of De Vries's own ethnic and religious heritage, a heritage in process of cataclysmic change. It was the Sixties, after all, and little, if any of our lives were left untouched by the seismic cultural shifts of the era. At twenty, I read Peter De Vries's Blood of the Lamb and laughed.

Forty years later, I almost cried.

I'm a different person today--not nearly so headstrong, far less sure of my opinions and will. Forty years later, I've got scars, even open wounds, from the fisticuffs me and the Lord have come to. Forty years later, I read an almost entirely different book. The novel didn't change of course. Certainly, I did.

Peter De Vries died in 1993, but I wonder if he ever guessed that of all his books, Blood of the Lamb would be the one that just won't go away. My guess is, he did. He wrote it just a year after the death of his daughter, who died at age 11 of leukemia; and much of the book, that which gives it its immense emotional heft, is the near recitation of the prolonged agony that child faced before eventually, finally, succumbing.* This novel's great lines don't come from his wit, but from his soul.

Honestly, that whole story I had nearly forgotten because that theological fight simply didn't hit me at twenty. I think it was William Hazlett who said something to the effect of no young man thinks he shall ever die; count me among 'em. But at sixty years old, Blood of the Lamb nearly took out the knees in my soul.

The story of Carol Wanderhope's agonizing death is the big story of the novel. Through his daughter's suffering, Don Wanderhope goes to war with a fully sovereign God, the author of our faith and our only comfort, for putting her through the horrifying paces of such inhuman suffering.
The question to which De Vries demands an answer is the same question Elie Wiesel can't help asking in Night and elsewhere, one of the most profound and difficult questions all believers can ever face: if God almighty loves us and his love is blankets the known world, then why on earth do people suffer such great horrors? Peter De Vries's most memorable novel is not a book for the weak of heart--or soul.

But it was a blessing to me, at sixty. It will be, I'm sure, the best thing I will read this summer.
Search Customer Reviews
Only search this product's reviews

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   
Related forums


Listmania!


Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject








i.e., each product must be in subject 1 AND subject 2 AND ...

Feedback