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Nova Express
  

Nova Express (Paperback)

by William S. Burroughs (Author) "LISTEN TO MY LAST WORDS anywhere ..." (more)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Inside This Book (Learn More)
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First Sentence
LISTEN TO MY LAST WORDS anywhere. Read the first page
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Concordance
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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9 Reviews
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4.8 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Remind you of something?, Mar 14 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Nova Express (Paperback)
I don't have much to add to the other reviews, except to note that one of the techniques of the Nova Mob is to provoke conflict by playing back the worst things opposing groups have to say to each other in a positive feedback loop. I started to think about this when tracking the Clinton sex scandal and impeachment on the Web, and have had cause to think of it since....
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5.0 out of 5 stars the cut-up trilogy, Sep 16 2002
This review is from: Nova Express (Paperback)
my god, man! Burroughs is a sheer genius. I read the trilogy as well as Naked lunch and the Wild Boys (also cut-ups) three years agoo. This is the one I remember most. I took awhile to read it, and I tried to compete in an interpretive speech with it, but ended up using a piece from The Ticket that Exploded. Every one of these books fascinates me. I also highly reccomend the Soft machine. This got me hooked. I also read Junky, Place of Dead Roads and Queer last year. I am now currently reading Western Lands!!! The man's resume is endless. His genius continues to influence in many deconstructionists today. Look at Radiohead, Andy Kaufman, David Lynch, all of those abstract thinking break down the cell wall artists. They are of a special breed. and this is a special writer!
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5.0 out of 5 stars "Give me that kimono!"-The Captain, Jan 4 2002
By S. R Robertson "crap basket" (Oh Henry?) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Nova Express (Paperback)
I won't be as vivid and descriptive as an eel in hot pursuit over gravy, er, I won't be as evil and malignant as Cortez babies, er, want I....EGAD! Start over...

I won't be as descriptive and detailed (there we go) on this review as on THE Wild Boys. This too is a good book, but my least favorite of my collection. It also seems to be the shortest, and less memorable. Parts of it seem to be more preachy than other releases, opening with Agent Lee talking about how the mass media is controlled by psuedo-punk poseurs addicted to controlling the brainwashed populace. From what I remember, Burroughs seems to make fun of these individuals (who have such elaborate names as Jimmy The Butcher, Jackie Blue Note, etc.) who are portrayed as racist punks fooling everyone with actually being the enemy of true revolutionaries. The plans they hatch up to keep the world controlled are amusing.

Aside from this most coherent of writing, the rest is pure Burroughs insanity...classics include the section "Twilight's Last Gleeming", in which a ship is going down and all hell is breaking loose (the immortal line quoted above is said by the drag-wearing captain of that ship). This may come as a shock, but some of the sections actuall bored me...mainly the more scientific information packed parts like the relationship between parasites and hosts, other easily forgettable things. But look past this, and Burroughs knows what he's talking about.

As before, there are some downright beauties and truths around...this may have been from one of the other books since they all seem to flow together as a whole, but I remember a story about a house shifting over a dsert plain and the tenants trying to socialize with lonely lemurs hanging in a tree. There's a great peice of poetry existing right around there. about angry warriors waitng around with their arrows loking for someone to shoot. It just proves that WSB would've been good at straitforward poetry, possibly better than Allen Ginsburg. He actually tried it with Tom Waits on The Black Rider album, remind myself I gotta get that. Wancha all stripped down, all stripped down....wrong album. Point blank, this book is just as worthy/signifigant/brown propeller on a fasion moon as any of his others. Dig? Flat, baby. Flatfooted and pure goulash on my headset tonight. Burroughs, my man...you know it...you...

Fadeout in classic form.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Notes From The Grey Room
This installation into the Nova series helps establish the reality of Interzone, first introduced in Naked Lunch. Read more
Published on Jun 5 2000 by jdubach

5.0 out of 5 stars thirty-six years old and still ahead of its time
Oh, this book is superb; thrilling. Burroughs' critique of media/information culture has never been more relevant (he even predicts, in 1964, the emergence of something that... Read more
Published on Jun 5 2000 by Jeremy P. Bushnell

4.0 out of 5 stars Word falling --- photo falling --- breakthrough in Grey Room
I read this book cover to cover when I was 17, something I felt to be an accomplishment. There's a narrative (sometimes) and striking, vivid language that you won't find anywhere... Read more
Published on May 8 2000 by C. S. Junker

5.0 out of 5 stars the ultimate use of language - useless fight with word virus
it's not an easy book, it's work of dark but extremely vivid imagination, a perfectly targeted description of counciousness-reality relation - a letter from the other side of... Read more
Published on Jun 3 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars the one with the silencer in his hand talks to you
Yes and he means business. This sequel to the Soft Machine continues to aim at shooting holes in the phoney fabrications of our indoctrinated minds. Read more
Published on Aug 19 1998

5.0 out of 5 stars Naked Lunch++
Society, consciousness, language--Religion, time space--Nova Express takes us for a ride through the very roots of these imposed structures. Read more
Published on Feb 25 1998

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