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Turn of the Century
 
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Turn of the Century (Hardcover)

by Kurt Andersen (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 659 pages
  • Publisher: Random House USA Inc (May 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0375500081
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375500084
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.8 x 3.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 3,064,162 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Everyone will compare Kurt Andersen's scathingly funny first novel to Tom Wolfe's fictional debut, The Bonfire of the Vanities. Like Wolfe, Andersen is a merry terrorist, a status-attuned assassin with liquid nitrogen in his veins, a prose style with the cool purr of an Uzi and the entire society in his crosshairs. And like the Man in White's protagonist, Sherman McCoy, Andersen's George Mactier. is a master of the contemporary universe- -not just Manhattan, but decadent post fin-de- siécle Hollywood, the globe-gobbling, infotainment-tainted news media and cyberspace from Seattle to Silicon Valley to Silicon Alley. Turn of the Century opens in February 2000, in a bizarre world with just a tangy twist of futuristic extrapolation. George has parlayed a Newsweek writing job into a PBS documentary into a $16,575-a-week job as a producer at the sinister MBC network. His series, NARCS, is a veritable Cuisinart of fact and fiction in which the actors get to participate in real drug busts and get all the best lines, since they're working from scripts. In the most notorious episode, the dealer they arrest turns out to be an Actors' Equity member (thanks to Rent), so he gets union scale and a recurring role. As George stumbles into a Wolfesque calamity spiral, his wife, Lizzie Zimbalist, ascends to power. Lizzie is a brilliant software entrepreneur: her "force- feedback technology" alternative-history game can sense players' fear. "If you travel to 1792 Paris, for instance, you are designated a besotted peasant or a frightened aristocrat or an angry sansculotte according to your heart rate, blood pressure, and skin conductance; too many twitches, the wrong sort of palpitation, and you're a marquess (or marchioness) headed for the guillotine". Needless to say, her insights into the year 2000 earn her bigtime interest from George's boss and Microsoft. Lizzie is a character at least as vivid as George, and their hectic family life is uncloying and acutely observed. Andersen's plot (involving Bill Gates's potential death) has more hairy turns than the Alps--read carefully or you'll go off the road. But you're guaranteed a wild ride with amazing characters: an irreverent investor inspired by James Cramer, a hilarious MBC toady, Timothy Featherstone--who's as marvellous a creation as Tony Curtis in The Sweet Smell of Success--and worlds' worth of social caricatures. Kurt Andersen has an uncanny ear for the way we talk now and Turn of the Century is sharp, knowing and subversive. Let's all pray that it isn't prescient as well. --Tim Appelo --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Review

"Outrageously funny."
-"The New York Times
"Sly and scintillating."
-"Newsday
"Inspired."
-"Entertainment Weekly
"Wickedly keen."
-"The Wall Street Journal
"Dazzling."
-"The Philadelphia Inquirer
"A big, sprawling book... He's infused it with so much inventive imagination.... It's a book that should be put in a Manhattan time capsule with the note: 'This is how we lived at the turn of the century.' "
--"The New York Times Book Review
"Wonderful writing... it sparkles with original observations about society, the media, marriage, Microsoft, computer hackers, the global economy and the new power triangle of New York, Los Angeles and Seattle."
--"USA Today
"Astonishing... An entertaining novel... Andersen [is] the first most promising novelist of the Third Millennium."
--"Entertainment Weekly

"From the Trade Paperback edition.


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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
2.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Shame I have to give it a crown, when zero would do, 27 Aug 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Turn of the Century (Paperback)
Boring, pretentious, long winded, self centered, poorly written, piece of media PR hype.! Kurt Andersen should not be encouraged to write another book in his life. I bought it thinking it would be a satirical, incissive comedy of manners, only to find it was merely the window for Mr. Andersen to show off his plugged-in life. Oh yes, I'm sure he wants us to know just how cutting edge his social and professional lives are. His command of what passes as modern language is not something I would be proud of. What a sad waste of good trees. And to think I perpetuated that massacre by buying the hardcopy. My sadness knows no bounds.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Contemporary satire that loses its way, 19 Feb 2005
By R. A. Mansfield "bertieronbob" (London) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
This review is from: Turn of the Century (Paperback)
Some novels date, some don't. Some contain references that will be passe as soon as they hit the page, some manage to inhabit a kind of eternal modernity.

Turn Of The Century is such a cleverly written book, but so of its time. Published in 1999, it was a wonderfully prescient account of the American media and the direction in which it was going. The sort of TV shows Andersen mocks in the book are getting closer and closer and no longer seem quite as outrageous as he makes them seem.

The book itself is too long and a bit pompous, but if you can remember the state of the media a few months before the cult of celebrity had happened, it will make you smile.

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