Reviews

The Ogre by Michel Tournier, Barbara Bray

gingerine's review against another edition

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dark emotional sad slow-paced

3.5

elisala's review against another edition

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3.0

Hé ben, si je m'attendais à ça.
Quel pavé, quelle aventure, quel personnage improbable.
Et plus on avance, plus il devient improbable.
Ça devient au fur et à mesure de plus en plus complexe, crade, bizarre, presque trop parfois, voire perturbant à l'occasion. Mais je me suis tout de même globalement régalée, sans pour autant avoir apprécié la lecture de bout en bout, car c'est parfois âpre à souhait.
Je n'ai pas forcément saisi la raison des changements de narration (mais ça ne m'a pas gênée) - ça me laisse penser que je suis probablement passée à côté de pas mal de sens caché dans ce foisonnant récit (clins d'oeil ou métaphores?).
C'est dense et bizarre, donc, on pourrait croire lire un récit mythologique parfois. C'est chouette.

angele16's review against another edition

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dark mysterious reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.5

kingkong's review against another edition

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5.0

This book has a lot of symbolism and the protagonist has weird feelings towards children and animals and the ogres here are metaphorical and not the fantasy creatures

merixien's review against another edition

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4.0

Bu kitap beklediğimden çok daha zorlayıcı çıktı. Açıkcası üzerine konuşmak, birkaç kelimeyle özetlemek zor. Çok karmaşık, efsane ve destanlarla harmanlanmış ama aynı zamanda da gerçeklikten kopmamış grotesk bir hikaye.

Kitabın psikolojik, sembolik ve tarihsel olmak üzere bir çok katmanı bulunuyor. Bunlardan tarihsel kısmını Nazizme köken gösterilen, Almanya’nın şövalyelik dönemlerine uzanan tarihi, ari ırk kavramı gibi konular oluşturuyor. Ön planda Nazi-alman ırkçılığını oldukça ilginç, farklı bir bakış açısından aktarıyor. Ancak romanın temelini Tournier’nin eserlerinin çoğunda gördüğümüz semboller ve metaforlar oluşturuyor. Yakın tarihin gerçekleri mitoloji ile muazzam harmanlanmış durumda. Abel’in okuyucuyu “sol el yazıları” ile götürdüğü karanlık dünyada Habil’in kaderi ile Üçüncü Reich’in düşüşünün ilişkilendirilmesi çok etkileyici. Zaten Abel’in isminin sembolize ettikleri ile İncil’den yapılan alıntılar da bir araya geldiğinde kendi geleceğine dair ipuçları veriyor. Benim hem çok beğendiğim hem de okurken çok zorlandığım bir kitap oldu. Duygularım hala karmakarışık. Fransızların İkinci Dünya Savaşı’ndaki tutumunu; okurken insanı dehşete düşüren - hatta zaman zaman büyük tiksinti uyandıran- bir yandan da iyi ile kötünün tersine dönüşümünü, belirsiz alanlar yaparak gösteren tenobur bir “dev”in üzerinden vermesi çok yerinde. Yine de benim için oldukça zor bir okuma oldu, 379 sayfalık bir kitabı ancak 10 günde tamamlayabildim. Herkese tavsiye edebileceğim bir kitap değil. Özellikle de çocuklara dair kısımlarda - her ne kadar yarattığı belirsizlikle canavar mı kurtarıcı mı cevabını vermese de- bazıları için rahatsız edici gelebilir. Tournier’yi daha önceden okuyup sevmişseniz bu kitabını mutlaka okuyun derim. Yazarı hiç okumadıysanız önce Çalı Horozu’nu okumanız daha doğru bir tanışma olabilir.

charlottej's review against another edition

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dark reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Loveable characters? No

3.0


Expand filter menu Content Warnings

jacob_wren's review

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Michel Tournier writes



There’s probably nothing more moving in a man’s life than the accidental discovery of his own perversion.



and:



The very perfection of its functioning and the terrible energy that went into it were enough to exclude him forever, but he knew no machinery is safe from a piece of grit, and that fate was on his side.



and:



The moth flies on wings of love toward the electric light bulb. And when he gets there, close to it, as near as he can be to that which attracts him irresistibly, he doesn’t know what to do. He doesn’t know what to do with it. For indeed what can a moth do with an electric lightbulb?




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catherine_80's review against another edition

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5.0

This is a dark and disturbing novel. And a wonderful work of art.

Main character looks for answeres about his purpose in life and his identity in myths (from the one about St. Christopher to the story of mythical Erl king in eastern Prussia). His story begins with Nestor, his only friend from boarding school he attended as a child, and Nestor's guidance in reading the signs. As he grows up, he notices his desires and interests are not common and just before his obsession with pre-pubescent girl lands him in jail in France WW2 breaks out. On his journey from Paris to Nazi's school for young boys he keeps seeing and reading the signs which are supposed to lead him towards the fulfilment of his destiny.

Ultimately, he does fulfil that destiny, but not before he realised in inversion just how horrible life in WW2 Europe had been while he was spending time procuring first food for future German soldiers, and then "recruiting" future German soldiers.

This novel can be read on different levels: is it a story about paedophile who finds an opportunity to live near children? Is it about people who are outcasts in peacetime, but always flourish in wartime? Is it about Nazis' obsession with symbolism? Is it about desire? Eastern Prussia? Myths and stories and profound effect they can have? Actually, it's all that. And much, much more.

It's an amazing novel, but be prepared to feel uncomfortable while reading some parts of it.

mylogicisfuzzy's review

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4.0

Very good especially since I am not exactly sure how I feel about it. Repulsed by the 'sinister writings' and attracted by the narrative at the same time. I think I'd have preferred there to be less at school with Nestor in the early part of the book but other than that, very good.
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