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Ben In The World
 
 

Ben In The World [Paperback]

Doris Lessing
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
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In a 1957 short story, "The Eye of God in Paradise," Doris Lessing brought to life a disturbed and disturbing child, a "desperate, wild, suffering little creature" who bit anyone who approached him. This child haunted not only the story's protagonist but the author. She first revived him in a powerful 1988 novel, The Fifth Child, pondering this strange offspring of an otherwise idyllic middle-class family. Who, or what, was Ben? Beast, goblin, throwback, alien, or a "normal healthy fine baby"? Lessing wrestled with these questions without ever quite managing to answer them.

She takes them up again, however, in Ben, in the World. Now 18, but looking 35, Ben is estranged from his family, forced to find his way in a basically hostile world. His yeti-like appearance invariably evokes fear or amusement. And his other habits (including an appetite for raw meat) hardly allow him to blend into the crowd:

He would catch and eat little animals, or a bird.... Or he stood by the cow with his arm around her neck, nuzzling his face into her; and the warmth that came into him from her, and the hot sweet blasts of her breath on his arms and legs when she turned her head to sniff at him meant the safety of kindness. Or he stood leaning on a fence post staring up at the night sky, and on clear nights he sang a little grunting song to the stars, or he danced around, lifting his feet and stamping.
After three fictional encounters, Lessing knows Ben well. She constantly intervenes to direct the reader's response to him, to the people who surround him, and to his (sometimes unlikely) experiences in Europe and South America. His misery and alienation remain the focus of the novel. Yet they are offset by the odd individuals who offer Ben their friendship--and finally, by his wayward quest to find people like himself. --Vicky Lebeau --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

When it appeared more than a decade ago, The Fifth Child, Lessing's powerful novel about a boy who was a freakish throwback to a primitive stage of existence, was justly praised as a shocking and memorable speculation about what happens when society is confronted with a human anomaly. This sequel continues Ben Lovatt's story, but with decidedly inferior narrative resources. Ben has run away from his upper-middle-class British family, who were humiliated by this genetic aberration. He is now 18, but with his fearsomely developed chest and arms, his squat and hairy body and his feral face, he appears to frightened observers to be a man in his 30s. Ironically, Ben himself is terrified of society. Unable to read, to handle money, to decipher even the simplest of situations, he is helpless, lonely and desperate. He realizes he must control the blood-red tides of rage that engulf his brain, lest he kill the adversaries who torment him. But in a series of lurid adventures in a plot that seems to have been made up in fits and starts, Ben is betrayed by nearly everyone. Only three women are kind to him: one is old and terminally ill, the other two are prostitutes. People who have power and money abuse him, notably an American scientist doing research in Rio de Janeiro, where bewildered Ben has been transported by a down-and-out filmmaker, who picked him up in Paris after Ben was used as a dupe in a cocaine smuggling operation. It's obvious that Lessing is making a social statement about how intellectuals acting in the name of art or science cruelly exploit simple people who can't defend themselves. The plot achieves bathetic melodrama in the deserted mining country of interior Brazil, where poor Ben, "knowing [he is] alone, used but then abandoned," meets his grisly fate and brings this soap-operatic story to its long-foreshadowed, tragic close. (Aug..-- alone, used but then abandoned," meets his grisly fate and brings this soap-operatic story to its long-foreshadowed, tragic close. (Aug.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
This card had afflicted Ben with such a despair of rage that he took it from his mother, and ran out of the house. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Flawless, Dec 28 2008
By 
I LOVE BOOKS (Italy) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Ben, in the World (Hardcover)
I was looking forward to Ben's story and the epilogue to "The Fifth Child" by the same author. I have enjoyed this book even more than I had its predecessor. This is a book about being different. About acceptance and understanding. A book that pierces the heart.
Ben Lovatt. Who was he? What was he? As vulnerable as a newborn baby, yet at times very wild, instinctive, almost... feral.

May I suggest to read "The Fifth Child" first. This sequel stands on its own perfectly but I still feel that the reader would understand Ben's tale better by reading about his birth and family beforehand.

Once again I have admired Ms. Lessing's writing style (just like before, no chapters in this book, just a few pauses) and her ability to convey an emotional pathos with a simplicity that captivates deeply. This book was gripping, powerful and really sad. The quote from a newspaper on the book cover -I own the British edition- summarizes my feelings "A wonderful novel, flawless as a black pearl".
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3.0 out of 5 stars Not a Fulfilling Sequel, Jun 17 2004
By 
Wendy Bell (Palmdale, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Ben In The World (Paperback)
The Fifth Child is one of my top five favorite books. Ben, In The World does not reach my top twenty. Although not a horrible book, I was really disappointed with Lessing's lack of focus on Ben. I found Teresa to be the most interesting character in the novel, especially her back-story. I was reminded of the film Run Lola Run because Lessing tried to give us so much story in such small snapshots and then ended them with "their story had a good (or bad) ending." It all seemed just too convenient, Ben's luck making him simply go through the motions in the novel; none of plot resulted from choices he made, rather other characters propelled the story except for the final anti-climactic (and only) choice Ben makes. I wish I had stopped with The Fifth Child and let Ben haunt my curiosity instead of trying to fulfill it with this book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars About Ben, you and me., Jun 20 2002
By 
Jan Dierckx (Belgium, Turnhout) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Ben In The World (Paperback)
The first novel about Ben, The Fifth Child, told us about a boy who becomes an outcast and some kind of a 'monster' that doesn't fit in society.
In the sequel , 'Ben in the world', it seems to me that our hero holds a mirror in front of us: how we struggle to give our live a meaning. It's also about how some of us are regarded as The Great Evildoer because we are, say, an artist painter instead of a respectable lawyer.
Will Ben find his place under the sun? Will he fit in society? If he does he will be luckier than many of us.
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