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120 Days Of Sodom And Other Writings
 
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120 Days Of Sodom And Other Writings (Paperback)

by Marquis De Sade (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (58 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 23.50
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Customer Reviews

58 Reviews
5 star:
 (19)
4 star:
 (14)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (8)
1 star:
 (11)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (58 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sade's Masterpiece, Feb 3 2001
I wanted to contribute a review to correct some of the impressions readers may have gotten from other customers' reviews of 120 Days of Sodom. First of all, I do regard 120 Days as a masterpiece -- Sade's only masterpiece, and a dazzling contribution to world literature. I will spend the rest of this review hopefully providing 120 Day's future readers some keys to appreciate this mammoth, peculiar novel.

120 days is shocking, horrifying -- disgusting. This is pretty well universally agreed upon. This in itself says quite a lot. We live in a world where "shocking" has lost much of its meaning. Yet the Marquis De Sade continues to shock our jaded, supposedly unshockable sensibilities; if we want to read this book well, it's worth asking ourselves why. As Simone De Beauvoir says in her introduction to this edition, Sade was a good novelist -- and a great moralist.

One thing Sade definitely was not was a proselytizer for sexual freedom. The recent move "Quills" -- while not completely misleading on this point -- was still much too frivolous, too much of a French sex comedy ( and also too traditionally heterosexual ) to reflect the Sadean universe. Sade is not Henry Miller; with him, sexual freedom is not an issue. Power is. The powerful are sexually free. Sex interests Sade far less than pleasure, and pleasure for Sade can't exist without squashing the weak. An exemplar of the Sadean universe might be the Michael Douglass character from "Wall Street" except that now he knows that sex, even above money, is the ultimate fantasy thrill of power.

In other words, they coined the word "sadism" after him for good reasons! 120 Days is not only the story of four men who act out their sick, abusive fantasies, but of four men who employ storytellers to "entertain" them -- with stories describing every sexual variation conceivable. The stories are valued by the degree to which they explore the relationship between sexuality and crime.

The curiosity is that, although his books disgust us -- particularly when we first start to read --Sade isn't particularly graphic. I can think of books with incomparably more explicit depictions of sex and violence -- for example "American Psycho". The difference is that in books like "American Psycho" or films like "Kids" the corruption is viewed from a distance; the author doesn't approve of what happens, he merely "shows it like it is." This is not Sade's attitude at all. He is a cheerleader for the horrors and excesses of vice.

I read a review recently that compared Sade to rap music. The reviewer jokingly insinuated that Sade was the eighteenth century equivalent of Ice-T. This, too, is untrue. Rap music generally makes a rather moral case. Rap artists posture to their audience as members of an underprivileged society who justify their misogamy/criminality by denouncing the brutal conditions imposed upon them. Sade justifies his cruelty by invoking Nature -- nature made me this way.

Moreover, if you look at how the world works, you will see that nature sides with the powerful. Nature encourages us to satisfy ourselves by stepping on others. This is what Sade says. In short, 120 Days isn't just a succession of shocking scenes, which many contemporary books are -- it is an intellectual justification of a philosophy of vice. Be prepared.

"That which does not kill us makes us stronger," said Nietzsche. I lastly want to emphasize why I believe a book like 120 Days has a positive value. I know this sounds strange -- particularly before you have experienced the sweeping lyricism, the ferocity of Sade's prose, the intensity of his passions, the obstinacy of a vision that few adults could sustain, and a rare children articulate -- but I believe it. Sade makes the best case that has yet been given for cruelty, if you will, evil. If his arguments weren't skillful, 120 Days would be an exercise in futility. Sade is like a nasty child, who miraculously possesses the intellect as well as the shamelessness to defend his behavior rationally.

Sade succeeds as an artist if his vision strikes us as sensible within its own terms, as bizarrely accurate, or at least well-observed. He tempts us toward the abyss of cynicism. Yet for me personally reading 120 Days was a liberating and even religious experience. It was like having my worst fears articulated -- and there was a sense of liberation in the aftermath of that.

Sade has done humanity a favor by visualizing hell. In a bizarre way, by describing the worst we could perpetuate, he also gives us a vision of the divine we cannot live up to. If you take 120 Days and invert it, you would have a vision of heaven, the divine in ourselves we believe in solely by faith -- but which escapes the capacities of words. Sade truly writes with an uncanny purity; of absolutes, absolute evil and, by implication, of innocence.This is why he is so often referred to as the Divine Marquis.

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5.0 out of 5 stars It won't take you 120 days to read it, Aug 15 2004
Someone once said that it's important to not only look at the goodness in human nature, but the darkness. Enter this book. Not my usual cup of tea, I decided to try this out on the recommendation of a friend and wow! what an eye-opener! The writing is not the best but the ideas and stories are remarkable. Would also recommend "The Bark of the Dogwood" for those interested in the shocking, the sandalous, the funny, and the bizarre.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Perversion, Pleasure and utter depravity, Jul 6 2004
By Kalai (Victoria, Australia) - See all my reviews
I read this book at the tender age of fifteen the first time, and I have read it numerous times. The content is remarkable, and far fetching. Now, the way I have seen it is that de Sade attempted to show the worst he possibly could, and in some ways he achieved that.

That said, he is a horrendous writer in this book, his style is abominable. But then again, he was living in a time when the vast majority of people were barely literate, if at all.

With an utter lack of compassion, he shows us what the human mind is capable of in the depths of our depravity, and in doing so, sears our minds with the depth of his brilliance. For anything that can be concieved can be done, and some will find arousal in this.

This book shows us the demons that lurk within us all, and it has pushed me to strive ever higher and not become as fallen as the libertines depicted within.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The Most Perverted Book Ever Written
In the opening pages of this rough draft of a "novel" titled "The 120 Days of Sodom", which was long believed to be lost and was re-discovered and first printed in 1904, more than... Read more
Published on May 30 2004 by I ain't no porn writer

3.0 out of 5 stars I'm Still Waiting For The Pop-Up Book Version
I'm gonna try to get down to the nitty gritty of this book. It's a real love it or hate it book, but I'm somewhere in between. Is it good? Read more
Published on Jan 14 2004 by Stanley Runk

4.0 out of 5 stars Very Interesting...
...but i do not see why this is a "Masterpiece".

I must admit reading The 120 Days of Sodom was a bit confusing, because i was not sure if weather De Sade is encouraging the... Read more

Published on Jan 1 2004 by 111111

5.0 out of 5 stars The Mirror, Crack'd.
One wonders what world some reviewers of this book are living in, and whether atrocities similar to (or worse than) the ones employed by de Sade occur in their world. Read more
Published on Jun 12 2003 by Terrance H. Heath

4.0 out of 5 stars be hesitant
After having digested the several reviews of this infamous text, it is apparent that this particular author's work continues to be misinterpreted by both his admirers and critics... Read more
Published on May 23 2003 by please read this

1.0 out of 5 stars The Most Hateful Book I've Ever Read
The idea of awarding stars to The Marquis De Sade for his sexual torture tome 'The 120 Days Of Sodom' is radically absurd. What, exactly, is there to congratulate him for? Read more
Published on May 8 2003 by Mr. M. P. Turner

5.0 out of 5 stars The funniest book that I ever read
This collection probably won't please a pious reader, but it pleased me. I never laughed so hard (or so often) as I did when I read 120 Days, Florville and Courval, etc. Read more
Published on May 7 2003

3.0 out of 5 stars DeSade and the Metaphor of Closed in Spaces
It has never been an easy task to approach DeSade and make intelligent analyses of him. His very subject matter has for centuries caused serious students of literature and... Read more
Published on April 8 2003 by Martin Asiner

2.0 out of 5 stars Written To While Away The Time
Don't let them fool you: this is an evil book. It was written by an obscenely fat little man who stood about five feet two inches tall in his stockings, and whose greatest enemy... Read more
Published on Jan 31 2003 by M. Hori

2.0 out of 5 stars Don't get me wrong...
De Sade is a powerful writer, an influential writer, and even an insightful writer. What he is *not* - even by his own stated standards - is a good writer. Read more
Published on Jan 9 2003 by The trebuchet

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