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The Woman and the Ape
 
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The Woman and the Ape [Large Print] [Hardcover]

Peter Hoeg , Barbara Haveland
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 37.95 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Peter Høeg, author of the international bestseller Smilla's Sense of Snow, has written a fable that explores our human status as inhabitants of paradise lost, and the trade-off between civilization and freedom. The story begins with a captured ape, dubbed Erasmus, a specimen of an apparently new species with a cognitive ability that seems to rival human capacities. Erasmus is rescued from scientific study and experimentation by Madelene, whose husband, Adam, is the zoo director. Escaping to an Eden-like nature reserve, Madelene finds an empathy with Erasmus that develops into a wild sexual liberation. When the pair emerge from Eden to try to stop Adam continuing researches on others of Erasmus' kind, paradise dissolves, and civilization wins out. Read an interview with Peter Høeg.

From Publishers Weekly

No one will ever be able to claim that HYeg doesn't know how to hook a reader. The newest ecothriller by the author of Smilla's Sense of Snow opens with the deceptively simple sentence: "An ape was approaching London." What the vague syntax and flat affect omit could (and does) fill a book. For instance, the "ape"-who's dubbed Erasmus-turns out not to be "some sort of dwarf chimpanzee" as eminent zoologist Adam Burden claims, but a brand new species of ape that just might have the potential for language and higher cognitive functions. The opening line gives little indication of the hubbub Erasmus will raise in a few short paragraphs when he causes the Ark, the ship that has carried him captive to London, to lose its crew and plow mast-first into busy St. Katharine's Dock. Or, a few pages later, when he leads Dr. Burden and his minions on a merry chase through the streets of London. Or, a couple of chapters down the road, when Erasmus seduces Madelene, who just happens to be Burden's beautiful alcoholic wife, and takes her away for a week-long lovefest at a wild animal park. The first line gives no indication of all this because the story and its characters are mere window-dressing for HYeg. While he's a fluid writer who is competent at telling stories, it's in the realm of ideas that he excels. There are long passages in which he analyzes Erasmus and human emotions and London itself in terms that are by turns mechanistic and organic. On one page, London is a "gigantic mycelium," a fungus. On a later page, we discover that London is a worn-out machine," full of blind spots and flat points." At the end of this fine and diverting novel, Madelene explains how she's always pictured angels, and her definition could as easily stand for Erasmus or London or even the Earth. "It's one third god, one third animal, and one third human." 100,000 first printing; major ad/promo. (Dec.) FYI: The movie version of Smilla's Sense of Snow, starring Julia Ormond and Gabriel Byrne, is scheduled for release in March 1997.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

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5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A refreshing comic satire, Jun 2 2004
By 
Lynn Harnett (Marathon, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Woman and the Ape (Hardcover)
Danish writer Peter Hoeg broke onto the American scene in a big way with his thoughtful thriller "Smilla's Sense Of Snow," his first novel published in English. While "The Woman And The Ape" has the pace of a thriller, it couldn't be more different.

A love story, a comic satire and a fable about the relations between human civilization and the rest of the world, "The Woman And The Ape" centers on two characters who could scarcely appear more hopeless and helpless.

Erasmus, the ape, opens the book with a daring escape from hardened animal smugglers, only to be captured by scientists after numerous run-ins with the city of London prove almost fatal. He is secretly installed at the home of rich and distinguished animal behaviorist, Adam Burden, who sees in this possible new species the fruition of his most ambitious dreams.

There, Erasmus arouses a mild curiosity and pity in the book's other main character, Adam's 30-year-old Danish wife, Madelene, an alcoholic beauty with a lousy self-image.

"Each morning Madelene was resurrected." At her mirror, "she did the one thing she knew herself to be truly good at: she re-created the myth which said that Madelene looks gorgeous." Her next task is to replenish her carafe of ethyl alcohol so she can float through her day being gorgeous and amiable and walling off the terrors of daily life.

In so doing she comes across the ape in his new quarters. "With some effort Madelene succeeded in coming up with a sketchy log of the past two days. The ape had arrived the day before yesterday. She had spent yesterday in bed with her carafe and that dreadful migraine. The bulk of the setup in front of her must have been erected in less than a day."

In her second encounter, "Madelene was overcome by a prickling sense of unease, as though she had sat on an anthill." Certain small truths home in on her along with the ape's "incalculable" gaze. These she quickly drowns, but something in her has been awakened.

She embarks on her own mission to discover what she can about the ape and her husband's activities, launching "new" selves (well fueled with alcohol) to accomplish the necessary daring subterfuges.

Hoeg keeps up a madcap energy, as humorous and cheering as it is biting and outlandish. Madelene takes on people she would ordinarily be too frightened to speak to, and in the process of amassing facts about the "impossible" existence of Erasmus, begins to free herself.

This she cannot actually do until she "saw her own weakness, saw it clearly, saw herself as the ape had seen her and then she gave up....She gave up drinking."

She organizes a daring, hilarious plan of escape for herself and Erasmus and the novel veers off in another direction - that of love story. This developing love is as lucid and erotic as the fog of alcohol was erratic and prickly.

By the end Erasmus has come fully into his own, a larger-than-life ape with a mission and a big surprise for the human race.

Hoeg's writing is pure pleasure - vivid and playful, earnest and rich, mocking and touching. His condemnation of animal exploitation is hardly new but his presentation is totally refreshing.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Thank you AGAIN Peter Hoeg, July 4 2003
By 
Rania Masri (Lebanon (the country)) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Woman and the Ape (Unbound)
Peter Hoeg is one of those rare writers -- whose every book is a literary treasure. I have yet to be disappointed by anything he has written. And this book -- the woman and the ape -- is not exception. Hoeg does such a masterful job at raising questions about our own species and our relationship to the Earth, that this book should be read by environmental studies students. Hoeg also entrances his readers -- once again -- with sensual writings, sensitive characters, and a magical air (as he did with Smilla's Sense of Snow), that this book should also be read in literary classes. ... simply: it is a book to be read. and shared.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A favorite of mine, July 10 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Woman and the Ape (Unbound)
I highly recommend this strange and beautifully written book. It held me spellbound.
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