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Adventures of the Artificial Woman: A Novel
 
 

Adventures of the Artificial Woman: A Novel (Paperback)

by Thomas Berger (Author) "Never having found a real woman with whom he could sustain a more than temporary connection, Ellery Pierce, a technician at a firm that made..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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From Publishers Weekly

Prolific novelist Berger (The Feud, Little Big Man) updates the Pygmalion myth with this witty, dark comedy: instead of a lovely Galatea, the protagonist's manufactured dream girl becomes a Frankenstein's monster through her ambition. Ellery Pierce, a twice-divorced animatronics technician, can't find a woman devoid of sarcasm and opinion, so he builds a companion from synthetic skin, batteries and bolts. But Phyllis, his near-perfect female replica, learns quickly and, absorbing the mass media ideal for beautiful young women, runs off to pursue a career in show business. Rising quickly above a stint as a stripper, a phone sex operator and a smalltown actress, Phyllis evolves into a cinema superstar. But when the action movieâ€"going public tires of Phyllis, and the depressed Ellery comes back into her life, she sets her sights on international fame through another venue: the presidency of the United States. With her alternately colloquial and overly formal diction, and her too-faithful adherence to society's ideals, Phyllis makes for an amusing critique of contemporary American society. In his 23rd novel, Berger skewers modern foibles from reality and daytime television to the cult of celebrity and presidents with voracious sexual appetites. But the brilliance of Berger's critique is in its levity, and his fanciful plot will keep readers laughing throughout. With few weaknesses, such as the unexplained existence of other robots, this book is the literary equivalent of cotton candy: not filling but fun to digest.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Booklist

In his twenty-third novel, Berger (Little Big Man, 1964) crafts a satirical look at the American pursuit of perfection. Technician Ellery Pierce, unable to sustain a long-lasting relationship, puts his skills to use building a robot to be his perfect wife. However, Phyllis quickly outruns Ellery's limited ambitions, taking all of a day to become a gourmet cook. She leaves him for a job as a phone sex operator, where her literal-mindedness is her undoing. She then lands a starring role in a nude version of Macbeth, which launches her career in mainstream action films. Meanwhile, Ellery, bereft at her desertion, tracks her down, and the two engineer a plan for her to run for the White House. Berger is technically adept here and quite amusing, even scathing, in spots, about the hypocrisy of male-female relations and Hollywood avarice, but his story is overly familiar, echoing the plot of The Stepford Wives and both the real life and the film roles of Arnold Schwarzenegger. A hit-and-miss affair, but Berger's name will draw some interest. Joanne Wilkinson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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First Sentence
Never having found a real woman with whom he could sustain a more than temporary connection, Ellery Pierce, a technician at a firm that made animatronic creatures for movie studios and theme parks, decided to fabricate one from scratch. Read the first page
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4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars Needs Oiling, Jul 13 2004
By Karl Dean "karl_dean" (Nyack, NY United States) - See all my reviews
I'd never read a Thomas Berger novel before this one. I picked it up after reading a favorable review in the New York Times. I was disappointed. My main problem is this:

The story requires that I buy the premise that a mechanical woman like Phyllis can be built (by a fellow named Ellery). Okay. And then I need to accept that other mechanical people of similar complexity also exist. Uh... built by whom? When? Never mind. A story like this requires that you toss those questions out of your head ... right?

Why, then, does the author make a point to mention details that I can't reconcile in the context of the story? Example: Phyllis can't go into the water because she's not totally waterproof. How, then, did she make all those Xena-type action movies with heavy sexual content without ever being asked to bathe on screen, or ride a horse across a river? Why didn't the author just have Ellery make her waterproof?

Another example: Phyllis would be unable to pass through security gates in order to board a plane without having her robotic nature discovered (her metal parts would set off the alarms). You mean she spent all those years as an actress and international superstar, but never once took a commercial airline flight? Wasn't there any travel involved? Why didn't the author just have her internal parts made from materials that are undetectable by security equipment? Plastics, space-age polymers--whatever. It's no more difficult to accept than the premise that she exists at all.

These details are basically inconsequential as far as the plot is concerned. They seem to have been placed there to give the story a tether to reality, but for me they only serve to suspend my suspension of disbelief. Never mind that they wouldn't work in "real life"--they don't work in the world the story creates.

If you ask the reader to accept a massive premise like the creation of a super-robot and move into a world of all-but-complete fantasy, don't constantly drag that reader back toward reality and cause this fantasy/reality friction.

By the way, Ellery has a trick up his sleeve on the last page that nobody who's ever seen a B-movie (the type Phyllis made so many of) would fall for, much less a superintelligent robot. It's just weak.

Frankly, the book reads as if Berger had some good ideas and a number of cultural jabs he wanted to get out there, but strung them together without taking care of the story's integrity.

Perhaps Thomas Berger's fans just enjoy the way he tells a story, but I think this book needs a technical consultant.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Another Classic from America's Finest Writer, May 13 2004
By A Customer
Having read each of Mr. Berger's 22 previous novels at least once, I now feel compelled to write a few lines of loving praise for this, his 23rd. From opening sentence to extraordinary final line, ADVENTURES OF THE ARTIFICIAL WOMAN is a wonderful read. Mr. Berger's wit and sense of irony are as sharp as ever, his ear for language dead on.

It would be a mistake, however, to read ADVENTURES as just a social/ political satire. Berger's work has never been concerned with melioration, and ADVENTURES is no different. It is instead a riotous meditation on the nature of power and creation. Berger's insightful observations and storytelling are captivating, and I had to laugh to keep from crying.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Girl's Gotta Have It -- Thomas Berger Style, May 11 2004
By Brian C. Dauth (Brooklyn, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Thomas Berger's latest novel features a man, the female robot he builds, and some of the best satire written in recent days. I am not going to mention anything about the plot since knowing little (as I did when I read the book) is the best way to approach this novel. Suffice it to say that the plot floats along with the logic of a fable and you will find yourself laughing out loud often.

I am also not going to speak of Berger's prose style. I did when I reviewed Best Friends last year (as does most anyone who reviews his work). His style remains a marvel of precision and grace. 'Nuf said.

I will say that this novel is a beautiful, sharp, and poignant satire. This is not a mean book. Berger's use of satire illuminates the often paradoxical nature of being human without ever stooping to ridicule or encouraging readers to feel superior to the characters. Berger celebrates humanity, while at the same time shaking his head in disbelief and wonder. He raises questions you can think and argue about for months, but never breaks a sweat or makes you feel "lectured at."

I recommend this book even more highly than Best Friends which I thought was terrific. Berger accomplishes in fewer than 200 pages what other writers cannot begin to do in 500 or more.

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