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High Rise
  

High Rise (Paperback)

by J. G. Ballard (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Details


Product Description

Product Description

From the author of the Sunday Times bestseller Cocaine Nights comes an acclaimed backlist title -- the unnerving tale of life in a modern tower block running out of control -- now reissued in new cover style. Within the concealing walls of an elegant forty-storey tower block, the affluent tenants are hell-bent on an orgy of destruction. Cocktail parties degenerate into marauding attacks on 'enemy' floors and the once-luxurious amenities become an arena for technological mayhem...In this classic visionary tale, human society slips into violent reverse as the inhabitants of the high-rise, driven by primal urges, recreate a world ruled by the laws of the jungle. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.


About the Author

J. G. Ballard was born in 1930 in Shanghai, China where his father was a businessman. After the attack on Pearl Harbour, Ballard and his family were placed in a civilian prison camp. They returned to England in 1946. After two years at Cambridge, where he read medicine, Ballard worked as a copywriter and a Covent Garden porter before going to Canada with the RAF.

In 1956 his first short story was published in New Worlds and he took a full-time job on a technical journal, moving on to become assistant editor of a scientific journal, where he stayed until 1961. His first novel, The Drowned World, was written in the same year.

Ballard has now been at the forefront of modern British fiction writing for over three decades, and today he is a best-selling writer of international stature.

It is his extraordinary life which forms the basis of the semi-autobiographical Empire of the Sun and the equally compelling sequel The Kindness of Women. His acclaimed 1984 novel Empire of the Sun, based on his experiences in the prison camp, won the Guardian Fiction Prize and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. It was later filmed by Steven Spielberg.

His more recent work includes the novel Rushing to Paradise, a collection of non-fiction writing entitled A User’s Guide to the Millennium, and Running Wild, a reissued novella, plus the highly acclaimed Cocaine Nights, a Sunday Times bestseller in hardback and paperback which was shortlisted for the 1996 Whitbread Novel Award.

2000 was a hell of a year for J. G. Ballard. It was the year the future arrived – the 21st century that this visionary futurist has been thinking of in his novels for the last four decades. It was also the year of his 70th birthday (and not something he is particularly keen to have a fuss made of – sorry, J. G.…). And it saw the publication of his latest novel, the daring and gripping Super-Cannes. 2000 also saw the repackaging of three of his classic novels, High Rise, The Unlimited Dream Company and The Crystal World. High Rise is one of the great parables of our time, the story of a tower block whose ambitious and powerful inhabitants begin a civil dispute that eventually leads to uncivilised chaos and murder. The next year saw reissues of more of his backlist, and also the inclusion of The Drought in the Flamingo 1960s series – a selection of nine of the greatest novels from the sixties published together as a set of collectable editions.

That Ballard has been writing visionary, apocalyptic fiction for so long is astounding – that both his old and new work has remained so fresh and shocking makes him truly unique. When the brightest flames of those other sixties greats has been extinguished, J. G. Ballard continues to produce books original and shocking enough to put most new writing to shame. So we salute J. G. Ballard, hiding out in his typically reclusive Shepperton style, and wish him well as he brings his unique vision into the 21st Century and waits for the world to catch up.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Technology as the Ultimate Destroyer, Jun 15 2003
By Jeffrey Leach (Omaha, NE USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: High-Rise (Hardcover)
J.G. Ballard's 1975 novel "High Rise" contains all of the qualities we have come to expect from this author: alarming psychological insights, a study of the profoundly disturbing connections between technology and the human condition, and an intriguing plot masterfully executed. Ballard, who wrote the tremendously troubling "Crash," really knows how to dig deep into our troubling times in order to expose our tentative grasp of modernity. Some compare this book to William Golding's "Lord of the Flies," and there are definite characteristics the two novels share. I would argue, however, that "High Rise" is more eloquent and more relevant than Golding's book. Unfortunately, this Ballard novel is out of print. Try and locate a copy at your local library because the payoff is well worth the effort.

"High Rise" centers around four major characters: Dr. Robert Laing, an instructor at a local medical school, Richard Wilder, a television documentary producer, Anthony Royal, an architect, and the high rise building all three live in with 2,000 other people. Throughout the story, Ballard switches back and forth between these three people, recording their thoughts and actions as they live their lives in the new high-rise apartment building. Ballard made sure to pick three separate people living on different floors of the forty floor building: Laing lives on the twenty fifth floor, Wilder lives on the second floor, and Royal lives in a penthouse on the fortieth floor (befitting his status as the designer of the building). Where you live in this structure will soon take on an importance beyond life itself.

At the beginning of the story, most of the people living in the building get along quite well. There are the usual nitpicky problems one would expect when 2,000 people are jammed together, but overall people move freely from the top to the bottom floors. A person living on the bottom floors can easily go to the observation deck on the top of the building to enjoy the view, or shop at the two banks of stores on the tenth and thirty-fifth floors. Children swim and play in the pools and playgrounds throughout the high rise without any interference. Despite the fact that well to do people live in the building, with celebrities and executives on the top floors, middle-class people on the middle floors, and airline pilots and the like on the bottom ten floors, everyone gets along reasonably well-at first.

Then things change. The gossip level increases among the residents, and parties held on different floors start to exclude people from other areas. In quick succession, objects start to land on balconies, dropped by residents on higher levels. Equipment failures, such as electrical outages, lead to mild assaults between residents. Cars parked close to the building are vandalized, and a jeweler living on the fortieth floor does a swan dive out of the window. Every incident leads to further acts of violence and increasing chaos in the lives of those in the building. People begin to take a greater interest in what's going on where they live than in outside activities and jobs. As the violence escalates, elevators and lobbies on each floor turn into armed camps as the residents attempt to block any encroachments on their territory. What starts out as a book about living in a technological marvel quickly morphs into a study of how technology can cause human beings to regress back into primitivism. Moreover, Ballard tries to draw a correlation between the technology of the building and this descent into a Stone Age mentality. He shows in detail how the residents of the apartments sink back into the morass, passing through a classical Marxist structure of bourgeoisie-proletariat, moving on to a clan/tribal system, to a system of stark individuality. In short, Ballard tries to equate our striving towards individuality through technology with how we started out in our evolution as hunter-gatherers, as individuals seeking individual gains. The promise that technology will liberate the individual is not the highest form of evolution, argues Ballard, but is actually a return to the lowest forms of human expression.

Within a few pages of the story, I thought this might turn out to be very similar to a Bentley Little book. Little, nominally a horror writer but often a social satirist, often takes a situation like this and shows how people collapse under the pressures of modern life. My belief was not born out, however, not because Ballard doesn't take certain situations over the top but because he imbues his work with a significant philosophical subtext that Little would never write about. Bentley Little is all about focusing on the over the top, outrageous incidents of humanity's decline, whereas Ballard is more interested in serving as a preacher on anti-humanistic technology, thundering out a jeremiad concerning where we might go if we do not take the time to think very carefully about the society we wish to create.

"High Rise" is a dark, forbidding tale of woe that is sure to get a reaction from anyone who reads it. There seem to be few out there who can deliver such devastating blows to our love of technology as Ballard does in his works. This author is often referred to as a science fiction writer, but "High Rise" works just as well on a horror level. So does "Crash," when I think about it, although the cold, detached prose of that book is not present in "High Rise." Whatever genre Ballard falls into, this book delivers on every level.

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3.0 out of 5 stars This book is currently available NEW from Amazon.co.uk!, Jan 1 2002
By Dupek Chopra "sark2000" (MD United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: High Rise (Paperback)
And it's more affordable than the used editions sold here!.....
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