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God's Grace
  

God's Grace (Hardcover)

by Bernard Malamud (Author) " ..." (more)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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3.7 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars The consequences of free will, Jan 2 2002
By Carole Barkley (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
In a thermonuclear war, the "Djanks" and "Druzhkies" destroy themselves, and all other inhabitants of the earth. Calvin Cohn, a paleologist who is in a diving bell off a research vessel at the time of the disaster, miraculously survives.

He finds that another being is aboard the research ship-a chimpanzee whom he calls "Buz." The two of them end up on a tropical island, where Cohn finds that Buz has a couple of electric wires protruding from his throat-and when Cohn connects them, the chimp is able to speak.

Cohn and Buz have a father-son sort of relationship, which gets complicated when they eventually find that a few other apes have also survived. Amazingly, the other chimpanzees on the island also acquire the power of speech, and Cohn becomes their teacher. They also receive periodic and enigmatic visits form "George," a gorilla, who is drawn to the sound of Cohn's father's cantorial recordings, which Cohn saved from the ship, along with a wind-up record player. The chimps are afraid of and dislike George, but Cohn sees something in him that keeps him trying to communicate with the ape, despite his lack of verbal skills.

Cohn tries to get the chimps to learn from the mistakes of mankind, to see themselves as capable of repopulating the earth with a race that does not make the same mistakes as Man. However, despite their relative sophistication, the chimps exhibit many of the same unpleasant characteristics found in humans. One of the chimpanzees is a female, Mary Madelyn, and she, of all the chimps, is the one who seems most capable of moral evolution. However, her insistence on being treated as a being with rights, who makes her own sexual choices, creates a crisis within the community.

This book has some very funny moments and is written in a wry, deadpan style. However, it is ultimately a tragedy with a message. When, with our free will, we choose to destroy God's gifts, we can't expect God to bail us out.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Eden revisited., Oct 4 2001
By B. Gone - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This book is a delightful tragicomedy that mixes elements of Robinson Crusoe and the Book Genesis built upon a tastefully disguised post-modern stage.

The paleontologist Cohn is the sole human survivor of the nuclear holocaust. Together with a chimp, Buz, he lands upon an uninhabited island. The chimp has an implant that enables human communication. More monkeys appear. Cohn tries to establish a society. Having studied for the rabbinate Cohn teaches his Judaic world-view, but faces opposition from Buz whose previous human companion thought him the principles of Christianity. Cohn tries to recreate the monkeys in his own image, and goes as far as formulating his own set of seven commandments and creating his own addition to the scheme of evolution. But alas, paradise is lost again.

While it is not surprising that previous reviewers have mostly focused on the religious aspects involved in the story -too bad that anti-Semitism always lurks right around the corner- this short novel is way beyond a satire of religion. Using a very light and smooth writing style Malamud presents the reader with a narrative in which humor, horror, grace and mystery blend seamlessly. A modern classic.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A truly beautiful, exceptionally moving book, Oct 5 1999
By A Customer
There's a staggering range of emotion here: from apocalyptic doom, to fearful survival, to irascible and choleric comedy, to wrenching simplicity of striving towards good, and bringing about a cataclysm. Humanity or, better still, human history personified... God's Grace is like Swift's Gulliver's travels: simple enough to captivate a casual reader, deep enough to drown a philosopher. A moving masterpiece.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars crazy stuff man
this book was some whacked out shite man... i can't believe my Catholic high school made me read this book... it was good but strange.. Read more
Published on Sep 14 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars give him a chance
sure, malamud's plot seems trite and few could actually believe these events, but he does raise some valid points in apocalyptic literature. Read more
Published on April 11 1999 by college student (estrellazul@h...

4.0 out of 5 stars One of the few books that has stayed with me...
Yes, the subject matter is non-believable; but what about suspension of disbelief? The storyline is shocking, and really is best read for fun. Read more
Published on Aug 23 1998

1.0 out of 5 stars One of the worst books on earth
Everything the critics laud about Malamud - the magical nature of his storytelling, the compassionate humanism of his characters, the Jew as metaphor for humanity - is exposed in... Read more
Published on Jul 27 1998

1.0 out of 5 stars The worst book i've ever read (by far)
I became a fan of Malamud after reading The Assistant and was ready for another excellent travel but what I got was a awful account of man and ape and a storyline that came from a... Read more
Published on Mar 22 1998 by TOTTYTL@WORLDNET.ATT.NET

4.0 out of 5 stars Monkey Business
This is one of the only truly shocking books I have ever read. Malamud continues in dark Russian tradition, testing his narrator until he is stripped of all but his most basic... Read more
Published on Jun 25 1997

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