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| The Name of the World: A Novel | 
enlarge | Author: Denis Johnson Publisher: Harper Perennial Category: Book
List Price: $12.95 Buy Used: $1.17 You Save: $11.78 (91%)
New (37) Used (33) from $1.17
Avg. Customer Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 830853
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 144 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.3 x 0.4
ISBN: 0060929650 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780060929657 ASIN: 0060929650
Publication Date: May 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Giving great service since 2004: Buy from the Best! 4,000,000 items shipped to delighted customers. We have 1,000,000 unique items ready to ship! Find your Great Buy today!
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Amazon.com Review The Name of the World finds Denis Johnson the visionary poet and Denis Johnson the sober novelist engaged in a puzzling tug of war. What begins as a muted evocation of grief takes increasingly strange turns, until the novel's second half spins away from the narrative logic of the first. The result is, well, mixed, a beautiful mess glued together mostly by the power of Johnson's transcendent prose. The protagonist this time around is not a junkie or a drug dealer or even a writer, but a college professor whose wife and child died four years earlier in an automobile accident. Michael Reed walks, he talks, he teaches, but inside his thoughts rip "perpetually around a track like dogs after a mechanized rabbit." Not much has happened since their death, and numbed by the habit of grief, he thinks that's just fine. "Nothing was required of me," Reed thinks. "I just had to put one foot in front of the other, and one day I'd wander wide enough of my dark cold sun to break gently from my orbit." That occasion comes when Reed reaches the premature end of his university appointment--and meets a redheaded cellist, the sort of wild, witchy, and becomingly deranged coed often found in books but perhaps less often in life. Flower Cannon (not, as one may imagine, the name she was born with) also shaves her pubic hair as public performance art and offers stripteases for fun and profit on the side. As the novel grows less coherent, Reed blunders into her childhood dream, or memory, which echoes his own dream and is also somehow haunted by the ghost of his daughter, or maybe Flower herself is the ghost of his daughter, or, well, something to that effect. (Dialogue such as "You. Are you a siren? A witch?" does little to clarify the situation.) But in the end it doesn't matter, because the dilemma this student presents Reed is as old as all time, and as easy to describe: "To let my wife and child be dead. I didn't think I was cruel enough for that. Because that is what the imperfections in Flower's skin invited me to do. There was a sense in which Anne and Elsie had to be killed, and killing them was up to me." Actually, this sort of straightforward psychological exposition isn't really Johnson's bag. Like his antihero, he's after "the unforeseen"--that which can't be explained in words but only suggested through imagery, the more shocking the better. "In my current frame of mind I'd hoped for warnings much stranger and not so obvious," Reed thinks after reading a religious tract. In a similar vein, Johnson instructs us how to read his book: "I think this narrative might cohere, if I ask you to fix it with this vision: luminous images, summoned and dismissed in a flowering vagueness." Vagueness does indeed flower here, but it does so amid flashes of genuine brilliance, the kind of writing that gave the classic Jesus' Son its particular brand of unhinged lyricism. Reed, for instance, is surrounded by characters in memorably Johnsonian states of desperation. History professor Tiberius Soames, fresh on the heels of a nervous breakdown: "Michael, we must get out of this flatness. The flatness and the regimented plant life. The vastly regimented plant life"; the caterer, a Peter Lorre look-alike who calls herself the Froggy Bitch and has the "smashed sinuses of an English bulldog"; the head trauma patient who wanders the grounds of a former lunatic asylum, holding aloft a small, imaginary object like an invisible torch: "I don't know. I can't see it. It's very light." No one but Johnson could bestow such radiant strangeness upon the inhabitants of a Midwestern college town. And if Reed's final, defiantly unreflective stance isn't much of a revelation, well, one hates to request a man with a knife sticking out of his eye in every Denis Johnson book. As brief and vivid as a hallucination, The Name of the World is the work of a prose musician who wisely refuses to play the same note twice. --Mary Park
Product Description
The acclaimed author of Jesus' Son and Already Dead returns with a beautiful, haunting, and darkly comic novel. The Name of the World is a mesmerizing portrait of a professor at a Midwestern university who has been patient in his grief after an accident takes the lives of his wife and child and has permitted that grief to enlarge him. Michael Reed is living a posthumous life. In spite of outward appearances -- he holds a respectable university teaching position; he is an articulate and attractive addition to local social life -- he's a dead man walking. Nothing can touch Reed, nothing can move him, although he observes with a mordant clarity the lives whirling vigorously around him. Of his recent bereavement, nearly four years earlier, he observes, "I'm speaking as I'd speak of a change in the earth's climate, or the recent war." Facing the unwelcome end of his temporary stint at the university, Reed finds himself forced "to act like somebody who cares what happens to him. " Tentatively he begins to let himself make contact with a host of characters in this small academic town, souls who seem to have in common a tentativeness of their own. In this atmosphere characterized, as he says, "by cynicism, occasional brilliance, and small, polite terror," he manages, against all his expectations, to find people to light his way through his private labyrinth. Elegant and incisively observed, The Name of the World is Johnson at his best: poignant yet unsentimental, replete with the visionary imaginative detail for which his work is known. Here is a tour de force by one of the most astonishing writers at work today.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 26 more reviews...
Like a torture that I didn't notice August 19, 2008 It took me months to finish this book. Not because I'd pause to ponder or want to let an emotion roll through me but because I could find nothing valuable in the book. And I looked.
It follows a flat, emotionally shallow protagonist supplemented by a stereotyped, "typical male fantasy" female and underdeveloped relationships, even with the wife & child he professes to mourn. It is a book bulging with symbolism but no significance - a type of literary masturbation that leads to nothing but the release of the author. Deeply disappointing.
Not the place to start. July 17, 2008 Having finished this novel, I felt relief that it wasn't my first encounter with Denis Johnson: otherwise never would I have ventured on to Jesus' Son, Angels, or Resuscitation of a Hanged Man - all great books, bursting with Johnson's inimicable poetry. The Name of the World, however, is awful. As a rumination upon grief it feels strangely superficial - verging on dishonest. The protagonist, Mike Reed, does not seem equipped to communicate his inner life to anyone; and so we are left with the neatly observed outward minutiae of College life in the Mid-West - hardly scintillating raw material. The introduction of a female muse again feels superficial, almost distant - the character never really comes to life, her silly name, Flower Cannon, looming larger than her, largely absent, personality. Yes, Johnson writes of and from chaos, but the chaotic elements here do not resonate. Even his musical language sounds apologetic, embarrassed to make an appearance above the barren terrain of the narrative. When, at the end of the novella, the protagonist claims his life "to be utterly remarkable", my response was - "You have to be joking!". I really did not feel that I knew the protagonist, nor any other character, at all. Mr.Johnson has a great talent, but it is not evident here. A disappointment.
bored and confused July 7, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
bored and confused
Does every woman in Denis Johnson's little book have to have long straight red hair, blonde with an out of season tan, and the most beautiful thing on the planet anyone has ever seen? His wife and daughter are killed by a flower truck, and then he falls for a girl named Flowers Canon. Great symbolism, or just bad writing? or just really stupid. And the guy with the three fingers on each hand, but if you look closely you can't tell which finger is missing. what is that about? And his daughter's name is Elsie, and there's another character named Eloise (page forty paperback). That's confusing, nothing else. I'm sure Johnson thinks it's clever, or again symbolic. It makes the reader go what? and then have to search back and compare these two names. Really a waste of a novel, glad at least it's just 129 pages
Oh boy - more navel gazing January 10, 2005 6 out of 13 found this review helpful
So unmemorable I'm not even sure I read it. Books about damaged college professors have begun to blur for me. Please, can these supposed writers of fiction just stop writing about the faculty of small liberal arts colleges? I can't remember what happened in which. There was a coed involved. And some drugs, I think. Or maybe that was The Corrections.
He drops the ball April 9, 2004 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
For the first nine-tenths, maybe, this novel is almost perfect; I got the sense that no _word_ could be replaced. The measured complacency of the prose gives a perfect sense of character; a sense of a man, in fact, who doesn't have a great deal of character, and is aware of it. It's seamless. I never questioned anything about the book - never found myself thinking of it as a novel, or of the narrator as a narrator; I just kept reading it. Near the end, though, it starts to fail. Its climax is so enigmatic - so self-consciously engimatic, it seemed to me - that it doesn't give any real sense of closure, and the small hole that this opens up is absolutley ripped open by the sudden, inexplicable developments on the last few pages (not to ruin anything; the narrator goes through a transformation which didn't seem believable or precedented to me). I think this novel's strongest trait, in the end, is its dignity. Johnson doesn't go overboard with the metaphors or the sense of religious longing; everything is very quiet, subtle and dark, but the sense of something greater still comes through. Again, though, with the right conclusion, it could have been overwhelming; as it is, it's just interesting.
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