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Wyspa autorstwa Aldous Huxley
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autorstwa Aldous Huxley

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Wyświetlone 12 z 12
This reminds me a lot of Brave New World: oh let's explain our society to this stranger + yay hallucinogenic drugs + yay population control, only with even less actual plot (which surprised me, since this was published much later than BNW). Also the society is a lot less dystopian, which for me made it a little less gripping. It was an interesting and relaxing read, though. ( )
  tronella | Nov 16, 2009 |
A quick read, this book is really less a novel and more a utopian fable. Perhaps Huxley had found Buddhism and LSD to relieve a great deal of suffering near the end of his life, but this work slips from being an enlightening critique of Western materialism and ends up an overly simple escapist fairy tale. While I as a reader was already inclined to believe there was some truth behind some of the points he was making, his thoughts were expressed in such childish thinly-veiled fashion that I couldn't take them seriously.
  caffron | Nov 8, 2009 |
I have to admit that I didn't find this novel as transformative as some readers did, but I'm quite glad to have read it. Truthfully, it's not much of a story, but it sure will give you food for thought and I expect Huxley's ideas will stick with me for a long, long time.

The protagonist of Island is British journalist Will Farnaby. Will isn't an entirely likeable character as the novel opens--as is so often the case in these tales of redemption. In an attempt to escape his troubles, or possibly to escape himself, Will takes a day off from a Southeast Asian business trip to go sailing. A sudden storm sweeps in, and in the novel's opening pages Will realizes he's shipwrecked and injured. Luckily, Will has washed up on the exotic and little-visited island of Pala. This island-nation is a modern (or the 1960s version of it) Utopia.

Will is discovered by some children who promptly go for help. It arrives in the form of Dr. Robert MacPhail, one of the island's most respected citizens. Dr. Robert patches Will up, and he and other islanders indulge Will's curiosity about their home. Over the course of just a few days, they introduce Will to every aspect of their most extraordinary society. From family life, medicine, education, and rites of passage, Will learns about Palanese life from birth to death.

He meets many islanders, including the future Raja who is about to come of age, and his mother, the Rani. These two members of the ruling class have some very different ideas about how things should be on Pala. And their agenda may just tie in with a secret agenda of Will's own... It is this loose storyline that the plot consists of, but it's actually a very minor part of the novel--just a thread that runs through a lot of philosophy and sociology. Personally, I had a very limited interest in and tolerance for a lot of Eastern religious (mostly Buddhist) philosophy. But I really loved the sociological ideas Huxley put forth in his Utopia. Really, really interesting stuff! For another reader, it might be the reverse. One way or another, I really have to believe the novel would be of interest to any thinking person. ( )
  suetu | Oct 2, 2009 |
The axe Huxley has to grind is overwhelmingly obvious here. This has been described as his Utopian vision - perhaps an alternative to the Dystopian vision of Brave New World. The vision is somewhat attractive, but kind of boring. He wants to mandate a worldview and a religious outlook. He presents it as supremely rational, but no matter how you slice it, it's mandatory. It's not about personal choice. Maybe that's the problem with Utopia. ( )
  scootm | Aug 24, 2009 |
Huxley's last novel, 'Island', is something that I wouldn't have read except for a chance recommendation. It's also something that probably wouldn't have resonated with me, if I had read it years ago. But now I find it fascinating on multiple levels, and it addresses a number of highly relevant issues of today. It's not so much a compelling narrative as it is a series of essays couched as a novel, but I found it interesting and recommend it highly. ( )
  mkp | Aug 24, 2009 |
I understand why this book is good and it was easy to see that it was written extremely well, but it wasn't exactly to my tastes. ( )
  prettypearls | Apr 23, 2009 |
Compared to his other books, that I have read, this one seems trashy for lack of a better word, however well written it may seem next to more obviously trashy books. In some of his novels he slips in his philosophical and moral ideas subtly, with no detrimental effect to the book, yet here he pays complete disregard to elegance and tact, drenching the reader with his misplaced utopian idealising, while forgetting to to put in a story to support the fact that there is nothing else to keep the discerning reader interested. I wouldn't go as far as to say this is a terrible book, just that Huxley has done himself no credit by writing it. Not all of his notions here are wrong, (a few are very good), just the majority; this book feels self indulged, as if it was written by a child who has just found a novel toy, which is in this case Eastern religion, along with all the philosophy and ethics, or lack thereof, that it drags along with it. I don't mind reading Huxley's other books that lack plots because they make up for it in style and content, whereas here all three are either absent or insufficient. If you are determined to read this book, being a Huxley fan, or someone who thinks that they may enjoy it, I advise a large pinch of salt to be taken before reading each chapter; this was the last novel he wrote, and I don't think it would be unfair to suggest that his imagination may have overtaken his intellect in its influence on his writing. It would be far too easy to be duped by ideas in this book because it is so nicely written, aesthetically stimulating, and penned with expert sophistry; this does make it nice to read, though it is only superficially rewarding once one notices that it is only well polished wishy-washy psuedo-religion and nonsense. If you take the book at face value, as a description of an interpretation of the Utopian society then you may find it interesting. If you expect the interpretation to be accurate or well thought out, then you should be disappointed. ( )
  P_S_Patrick | Mar 2, 2009 |
See Island at From Word to Word
  jeremylukehill | Feb 24, 2009 |
shame this is so awful being that it's his last book. just trying way too hard to be modern. I don't know, I need to re-visit it. ( )
  TakeItOrLeaveIt | Feb 21, 2009 |
I must admit I lost interest in this, and didn't finish it. It doesn't really work, although Huxley's wit and intelligence do sometimes shine through the rather tedious exposition. ( )
  richard_carpenter | Jan 1, 2009 |
A novel that expands upon the themes of "Brave New World", in which a journalist who has been reduced to a barren shell by the corruption of Western civilization stumbles upon an island paradise, free of strife and injustice, where the main occupations are lovemaking and chewing the hallucinogenic drug Moksha. Intriguing, but a misguided alternative to the ills of modern society. ( )
  burnit99 | Jan 31, 2007 |
Wyświetlone 12 z 12

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