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Millennium People: Novel
 
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Millennium People: Novel (Paperback)

by J.G. Ballard (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: HarperPerennial; New edition edition (7 Jun 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0006551610
  • ISBN-13: 978-0006551614
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12.8 x 2.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 156,835 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #29 in  Books > Fiction > Cult Authors > Ballard, J.G.

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

The peasants, goes a tedious old joke about Wat Tyler's mob, are revolting. In JG Ballard's unnerving, prophetic novel Millennium People, however, it's the middle classes that are staging the revolution: blowing up the NFT, burning their books and defaulting on their maintenance charges. Rejecting, in short, everything that they've worked so hard for--The Bonfire of the Volvos, as one rather droll chapter heading has it.

At the forefront of this petit bourgeois insurrection are the occupants of Fulham's Chelsea Marina, (as ever with Ballard) an exclusive housing community. Led by the charismatic Dr Richard Gould, a disgraced paediatrician turned "Doctor Moreau of the Chelsea set", Marina residents Kay Churchill, a former film lecturer; civil servant Vera Britain and Stephen Dexter, the parish vicar and an injured airman (another Ballard perennial) have unleashed an arson campaign against targets deemed suitably middle class.

David Markham, a psychiatrist and the book's steely narrator, is drawn into the Marina's inner circle after his ex-wife Laura is killed in an apparently meaningless bomb attack at Heathrow airport, (prime Ballard territory, of course). Meaningless is the insistent motif: Markham's current wife Sally was crippled in a freak accident and the murder of a banal if inoffensive television presenter (loosely modelled on Jill Dando) is one of the seemingly random violent acts unleashed by Gould, precisely because of their apparent randomness. "The absence of rational motive", as he says, "carries a significance of its own".

A master of sustained unease, Ballard has again excelled in fashioning a gripping, psychologically disturbing novel, that, like High Rise or Super-Cannes, is part cultural analysis and part surreal social prediction. --Travis Elborough --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



Review

'Wonderfully warped, blackly comic! written with Ballard's customary panache, its potent mix of sex, violence and radicalism will keep his fans happy. Millennium People is at once deadly serious and slightly ridiculous -- and somehow all the more unsettling for it.' Economist 'Much of the fun of Millennium People -- and it is one of the most amusing novels I've read in a long time -- comes from watching as the world finally catches up with Ballard and Ballard, wryly, reacts.' Guardian 'Terrifying and strangely haunting! A riveting work from a writer of rare imaginative largesse, a bearer of bad tidings, unforgettably told.' Daily Telegraph 'Another disturbing and extraordinary vision exploring the nature of violence and pleasure.' Bookseller 'Ballard's flowing prose exerts its usual hypnotic spell and there are many darkly beautiful moments.' Andrew Martin, Daily Express 'Ballard, acutely fierce as ever, detonates a bomb under Middle England in his continuing attempt to shock the middle classes out of complacency and into violent struggle.' Esquire 'Very weird stuff! This is a tidy and thoroughly English sort of revolution, with the perpetrators considerately ordering skips beforehand. Ballard is a natural surrealist; his is a world where the unthinkable is commonplace and rationality chucked in the towel long ago. However deranged Millennium People might appear, Ballard's phrasing is as sure as ever. He writes wonderfully well about London. His characterisation is as vivid as it is strange. An extremely unsettling novel. Reading it is like having all the planks that underpin your life removed one by one and being forced to confront the brutality and emptiness that lies below.' John Preston, The Scotsman 'The strongest presence must be the sprawling, sinister, banal and electrifying metropolis that is Ballard's London. He has created a compelling city rooted in acute observation and extraordinary imagination. He is in a league of his own! who else could come up with "long-term car park of the soul"?' Sam Phipps, Herald

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Rebellion of the Chattering Classes, 4 Oct 2003
This review is from: Millennium People (Hardcover)
The hallmarks of Ballard's speculative fiction surface again here: airport locations, chronically unfaithful wives, messianic figures, civil unrest and alienation. And above all the desire for violent catharsis and the alchemical transformation into a more authentic level of meaning. In his early science fiction this was by means of natural forces. In 'Crash' there is again the overwhelming urge to destruction via technology. Here it is by social forces - dissatisfaction, uprising and revolution.

The intriguing feature of this novel though is that the uprising is by the comfortable middle classes who appear to have everything they need. And here is the rub - this security and comfort is possibly a fiction , an illusion to keep the status quo of a controlling society. The 'chains' here are not tied by others, the rules are not imposed from without; the imprisonment of the middle class is entirely of its own making. In 'Millenium People' it is never made entirely clear what is wanted to replace things after the revolution; we just have rebellion for its own sake. The middle classes have comforts in abundance so what is lacking? Are they being hoodwinked into conformity and passivity? Is their obsession with rules a symptom of masked fear and insecurity? Whatever, Ballard certainly invites the reader to ask these sort of questions and to take a look at current social phenomena from a different perspective. The writing here is disquieting - cosy views are being challenged.

In the novel, random and meaningless acts of violence can be interpreted as attempts to kick back against a stultifying and deterministic universe. Perhaps there is a deep resentment of too much safety, security and comfort. A sort of scaled down 'paradise syndrome' is afflicting the affluent society - maybe they need a good riot or two just to feel human again! The existential themes dealt with in this book have wider application, especially as what is now understood by 'middle class'(the term Ballard uses throughout the novel)has changed a good deal over recent decades and now includes much broader sectors of the population than in the past.

Humanity is biologically designed for fight and flight - testing boundaries is hardwired into our nervous systems. If the environment is not challenging enough we may make our own challenges; anything to avoid psychic atrophy. We need something to tussle with, to fight against in order to survive and evolve. The uprisings in 'Millenium People' could be a symptom of this yearning for a more dangerous and elemental life.

I see a warning in this book. The time is ripe for a charismatic leader to tap into the collective consciousness and stir up disaffected swathes of the populace. An all pervasive media and telecommunications network could fan the flames of a revolution far more rapidly than at any time in history. Maybe there is nothing like a good uprising to kill off boredom, lassitude and the dreary 'business as usual' predictability of modern life. In 'Millenium People' this is played out on a small scale but the novel unnervingly shows that the seeds of discontent are already in the ground and just waiting for the right moment to germinate.

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Finding Meaning in Meaningless Times, 8 Jul 2004
There isnt really an appropriate way to begin this review other than to say that this is, for me, Ballard's best and that he has clearly only improved with age. Millennium People could not be more typical Ballard from the outset: Urban setting, usual themes, dystopian vision etc. but he has excelled himself by sticking to his strengths and improving on them.

Characters in Millennium People are far more sophisticated than a Ballard reader might expect. From the mysterious Richard Gould to the fiery Kay Churchill this improvement in characterisation helps convey the many messages in the story. What Messages? Well as usual, themes are around society, psychology, philosophy and politics, but instead of being deduced from the outcomes of the plot (as you might with say, High Rise), the morals come directly from the characters mouth and being the ever naive and passive David Markham, you get to hear everyone's side of the story.

The development around middle-class society, violence and even the meaning of life is very well handled and kept interesting and relevant with a twisting, mystery plot to which you're always trying to guess the ending whilst grappling with the challenging questions the characters ask of you and Markham.

To summarise, this is exciting, accesible, thoughful, sophisticated, interesting and enjoyable. It has the feel of an author reaching perfection with the complexity of The Atrocity Exhibition combined the atmosphere of High Rise...

...and to top all of that, this edition from the nice people at Harper-Perennial comes with a lovely jacket and an interview thingy at the end so read it and enjoy!

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21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ballard mans the barricades, 21 Mar 2004
By Mr. Hugh Harkin "hugh_harkin" (Scotland) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Millennium People (Hardcover)
The publication of a Ballard novel has become as familiar an event as Wimbledon, the Cheltenham Gold Cup or a terrorist bomb. And I think Ballard would like that. This story begins with an explosion at Heathrow Airport which kills the ex-wife of psychologist David Markham and in light of the attacks which have recently taken place in Madrid and the expected atrocity Britain is waiting for, this book attains a rare level of importance. The events described herein cast a shadow from the near future which falls on our tube stations, bus lanes and shopping malls.

The initial twist in 'Millennium People' is that the Heathrow bomb plunges Markham into a world of middle class revolutionaries and agitators who may or may not have planted the device. Markham allows himself to be sucked into the front line of all manner of protests as he seeks to penetrate this new class of anarchist, where a simple argument over double yellow lines in Chelsea is inflated into a man the barricades issue.

There were two moments of extreme bravery in the novel when Ballard touches upon the Hungerford massacre when a man named Michael Ryan went crazy in the town with an AK-47 and also the murder of tv presenter Jill Dando. When I read these sections of the book, everything seemed to be in slow motion, as if I was reliving the original news reports of those real-life tragedies. When a writer does that to you, the importance of the novel is beyond doubt.

If you like this book I would recommend any other Ballard novel - especially 'Super Cannes' and 'High Rise' which both demonstrate the collapse of middle-class loyalties to the establishment.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Unconvincing and uninvolving
It seems with Ballard you either like his brand of stark social comment or you don't, and this book just doesn't work for me. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Phil O'Sofa

3.0 out of 5 stars millenium people
I'm a bit disappointed with this book. It's readable, but not riveting. It raises a worrying prospect, but not as well as some of Margaret Atwood's work. Read more
Published 7 months ago by harriot arbuthnot

1.0 out of 5 stars One for the Daily Mail readers
If it's a satire, it's lacking wit, insight and humour, and if it's not satire it betrays a staggering naivete. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Bryan

4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
If you like Ballard's themes of what happens when polite society breaks-down then you'll love this book - if you don't ... then you won't!

I loved it. Excellent stuff.
Published 16 months ago by KP.

1.0 out of 5 stars The dinner party disaffected
This book was based on a ridiculous premise, namely that the middle classes, spouting the same psycho-babble with which they have fuelled many a post-party conversation, rise up... Read more
Published 19 months ago by Dorothy Shaw

1.0 out of 5 stars Pretentious and dull
This is among the worst books Ive ever read. I couldnt follow the plot,and the language was over pretentious and unexciting. I have heard alot about J.G. Read more
Published 19 months ago by A. Auburn

5.0 out of 5 stars Prescient and unnerving
Like many of Ballard's books, 'Millennium People' deals with the unravelling of society's structure and strictures. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Lee Cowperthwaite

4.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not great...
'Millennium People', the latest novel from J. G. Ballard, describes how violent dissent gradually infects a section of the affluent British middle-class. Read more
Published on 10 Jun 2004 by scribeoflight

2.0 out of 5 stars Initially excellent - ultimately disappointing
I started reading this book in high hopes - it seemed that here was a plot that would look at why the middle classes are so docile and complient and seem willing to accept almost... Read more
Published on 1 Jan 2004 by A. J. Sudworth

1.0 out of 5 stars If you ever wanted to burn a book, try Millennium People
As a JG Ballard fan for many years I was naturally appalled to find that this book was as bad, if not worse, than his last. Read more
Published on 5 Nov 2003

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