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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Luminous, White Blindness
BLINDNESS is thought of by most people as Jose Saramago's masterpiece (although all of his works of fiction, with the exception of THE TALE OF THE UNKNOWN ISLAND are masterpieces) and, while I think THE YEAR OF THE DEATH OF RICARDO REIS may be more sophisticated, I do think BLINDNESS encompasses the most universal theme.

BLINDNESS begins when a man in his car is waiting...

Published on Mar 30 2004 by Totally Anonymous

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3.0 out of 5 stars Human Nature Exposed
A dark look at the core of human nature and the will to survive when stripped of a sense that is widely taken for granted. The book has many literal levels that are open to interpretation and is written with very little punctuation that is sometimes difficult to follow in dialogue-heavy areas. Overall, an interesting look at the breakdown of society when laws are...
Published on July 2 2004 by D. Martin


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Luminous, White Blindness, Mar 30 2004
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
BLINDNESS is thought of by most people as Jose Saramago's masterpiece (although all of his works of fiction, with the exception of THE TALE OF THE UNKNOWN ISLAND are masterpieces) and, while I think THE YEAR OF THE DEATH OF RICARDO REIS may be more sophisticated, I do think BLINDNESS encompasses the most universal theme.

BLINDNESS begins when a man in his car is waiting for a light to change. Before it does, however, he suddenly loses his sight completely. The blindness that has afflicted this poor driver is no "ordinary" blindness, however. Besides the speed with which it overtook him, it's a luminous whiteness rather than darkness.

The person who helps the man home is soon afflicted with the same blindness, himself, as is his wife and the doctor the first man consults. In fact, impossible as it sounds, this "white blindness" seems to be contagious and soon an entire group of people have been afflicted.

The blindness soon comes to be known as the "white sickness." Fearing an epidemic, officials round up those who have been affected and quarantine them in an empty mental hospital. This group consists of the first blind man, his wife, the doctor, the doctor's wife and three of the doctor's patients. The doctor's wife, however, for some unknown reason, hasn't lost her sight. She only pretends to do so so she can remain with her husband. As the book progresses, she not only becomes the "eyes" for the people in her group, she becomes the "eyes" for the reader as well.

As the hospital fills, it soon becomes clear that the quarantined victims weren't quarantined soon enough. The blindness is spreading like wildfire.

Inside the hospital, those afflicted have formed "groups" and each group is intent on protecting its own territory. As conditions deteriorate, so does the "humanity" of those quarantined. People steal food, others demand women be brought to them, arguments ensue and pools of urine and excrement accummulate. It's obvious that the blind have descended into more than a nightmare; they've descended into hell.

Trapped inside their luminous, white nightmare, most of the blind sink to the depths of despair and inhumanity. There are, however, a few acts of genuine kindness along the way to depravity and these few acts show the afflicted just how important "being human" really is.

BLINDNESS is a dark and chilling tale about a world that refuses to see. A world that "turns a blind eye" to the suffering and inhumanity of man. It's also a meditation (revelation, maybe) about the most primal instincts of mankind.

BLINDNESS is written in the trademark prose Saramago has made his own: The lack of punctuation (except for commas and periods), the sentences and paragraphs that go on for pages and pages. This prose seems to "fit" BLINDNESS better (at least to me) than any of Saramago's other books. The torrent of words seems to fit the rapidly deteriorating environment.

It doesn't give away anything of the plot to tell you that at the end of the book, Saramago does offer a world in chaos a ray of hope...in the form of a man who is truly blind.

BLINDNESS is a horrific book, but it is a book that is also filled with tremendous beauty. I think this is not only recommended reading for any serious reader, but reading that is required.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars SIMPLY A MASTERPIECE!, Jan 16 2004
By 
JRU (PARRAMATTA, AUSTRALIA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
How can you trust another human being after reading a book like Blindness? Why should you trust another one? And be disappointed? And feel rejection? And feel unloved?

BLINDNESS is a masterpiece. A moving work of unbelievable power. THE WASHINGTON POST called it "an important book, one that is unafraid to face all the horrors of the (20th) century." But, let me call it "Saramago's personal gift to humanity," and let me explain why.

Reading it is like being guided, by something, familiar but distant, unknown. Our childhood perhaps? Our inner demon? Or maybe just Saramago deliberately guiding the reader? I laughed whilst reading the "rape scene", I honestly found it hillarious. The incorporation of all the bits-and-pieces didnt break my heart, I just found it too clinical, if not comical (The technique reminded me of that now-classic and misunderstood book AMERICAN PSYCHO, and Banville's THE BOOK OF EVIDENCE, though, for obvious reason, BLINDNESS is far more important than the two mentioned works).

I found myself laughing whilst reading the "rape scene". And after that, a moment of silence. I felt disgust. Of myself. I saw myself as a bystander of an unimaginable cruelty... and I just laughed.

The 'prisoners' fighting for their food I found quite comical as well, and many more. And I wonder whether the light-hearted treatment of these scenes are deliberate. Saramago saying, "Hey, the world is full of hatred, but what are you doing about it?" You're just laughing.

This is beautiful book. We should all give our politicians this book (or such book) for Christmas.

FIVE STARS

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars An intense social commentary, April 11 2003
By 
Rachel Andrews "hexmedia2" (Bellingham, WA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
It is true the writing style is difficult to get over at first, but the way that the discourse is written almost makes you feel blind - like if you were to close your eyes and someone were reading it aloud, it would sound like you were just hearing the conversation between characters as though they were right infront of you, but you can't see them. I think the other comment about it not being realistic is a little un-thought out. Even with the technology today, we would still be scared to death of an epidemic of this kind, and would likely do all of things which Saramango depicts. I think this book takes a good look at human nature and what drives us - greed, pride, envy and lust. The ending left me satisfied too. Recommended
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars This Will Endure, Sep 10 2000
By 
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
When it comes to giving a shock to the reader early on, no novelist can match the tactics of Jose Saramago. The Portuguese master has endless surprises up his sleeve: a whole peninsula gliding down the deep sea (THE STONE RAFT); a dead poet meting his living alter-ego in a hotel room (THE YEAR OF THE DEATH OF RICARDO REIS); or a strange machine flying high in the air, powered by 'human will' (BALTASAR AND BLIMUNDA)! If these are not weird enough, Saramago has chosen to turn a whole nation blind in the novel BLINDNESS. Blindness is always a powerful literary metaphor, and in the hands of Saramago it dazzles, as he pries into its numerous connotations. In his Nobel Lecture the author proclaimed that he 'wrote BLINDNESS to remind those who might read it, that we pervert reason when we humiliate life, that human dignity is insulted everyday by the powerful of the world, that the universal lie has replaced the plural truth, that man stopped respecting himself when he lost the respect due to his fellow-creatures.'

The novel has a simple and realistic storyline. A man sitting in his car suddenly goes blind at a busy traffic inter-section. All who come in contact with the unfortunate man - the man who escorts him to his home, the eye doctor, and the patients who were with him at the clinic - lose their sights one by one. When the matter is reported to the authorities, all these blind people are huddled together and quarantined in a wretched building that was once a lunatic asylum. The eye doctor's wife, who is inexplicably spared her sight, also sneaks into the building pretending blindness. A life of untold misery is in store for them. Once the internees succeed in finding their way back to the outside world, they confront the same pandemonium and horror, as, by then, the whole nation had gone blind.

Despite its apparently simple and eventful exterior, the novel stirs up strong feelings and leaves a powerful impact in the reader's psyche. The reader can never escape from an ever-present sense of foreboding. As the story progresses, his worst fears come true, and he declares resignedly, 'these are the workings of destiny, arcane mysteries' (p 117). The brutality of the armed soldiers guarding the inmates is more disturbing than the Orwellian images. The horror that surrounds the lives of the hapless inmates and the inhabitants of the doomed city, churns up the reader's innermost feelings violently. The vividness and the scale of squalor and waste inside the building and on the streets, conjure up visions of hell. The violent scenes inside the wards, created by the blind hoodlums, confound the reader's mind. This is murkier than the heart of darkness, despite one character's likening of his condition to 'living inside a luminous halo' (p 90).

Can man's fall from grace be reversed? Saramago provides the answer in the character of the doctor's wife, the only person with her sight in tact. She is the beacon light in the middle of this melee, like a guardian angel she guides her charges through thick and thin. She epitomises human spirit, which emerges triumphant at the end. 'Here we are all guilty and innocent' (p 96) she declares and goes on to show that blindness is not just living 'in a world where all hope is gone' (p 209).

The novel proves that appearances can be deceptive in the matters of human relationships, values, morality, and our social and political systems. Behind the veneer of civilisation lurks the animal instinct of man, always ready to pounce. In the struggle for survival, all the man-made systems go down like ninepins, leaving the individuals to fend for themselves.

BLINDNESS is a brilliant piece of work, born out of Saramago's profound compassion for fellow human-beings, his intimate knowledge of the social systems and a clear understanding of human values: all bye-products of a sagacity, which very few possess. The book will definitely endure.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Simply masterful, Dec 30 2011
By 
Kadi Kaljuste (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
Blindness is one of those books that's really like no other I've read. It's written in a unusual style but one that was an easy read once you got into the rhythm. The story itself is simple and complex at the same time which is what makes this book so rivetting. The scenes are so vivid - many of them disturbing - there were times I felt I could smell them. Simply a terrific read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing, Oct 14 2009
By 
S. El-Hilo "Adores Books" (Burnaby, BC CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
Amazing, Amazing and Amazing. If you are into different writing styles, you will love Jose Saramago's style. Takes getting used to, but when you do, you will get hooked. The story is an eye opener, full of emotion and interesting characters. Its wonderful, leaves you thinking about many things for a long long time.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A masterpiece of a deep thinker, July 8 2009
By 
M. Rau "pirea" (WL) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
The great gift of this writer is that he can write a simple story with simple words producing in the final an astonishing result. The way he drives the story and inserts his own comments regarding different facts, shows great writing mastery. Beyond each phrase, you can fill a charge of deep thinking and profound knowledge of human nature, and in the same time compassion for human being.
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4.0 out of 5 stars great display of the bright and dark sides of the human spirit, May 4 2009
By 
mellyboo (Toronto, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
Saramago's Blindness is such a compelling story that despite the style of writing and lack of punctuation, it was still a page turner. It did take me longer than expected to get through it, but I found myself reading until my eyes would no longer let me read. The character development is so great, that I did not even really care that they lacked actual names. All of the characters exemplified both the greatness and ugliness of the human spirit. The story is not only a story of hope when all hope really should have been lost, but it shows the dark realities of human nature and the apocalyptic society that the world could become, should such a tragedy befall it.

Definitely worth a read, I cannot wait to see the movie, even though as with all book adaptations it more than likely will not live up to the greatness of the book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Can't wait for the movie to come out on DVD, Jan 4 2009
By 
Sheila J. Croome (Cameron, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Blindness Movie Tie-In (Paperback)
I bought a book to read over the Christmas holidays and WOW - I certainly found one in BLINDNESS. It's the type of story that once you begin reading you want to (or feel you have to) continue until you know how the story ends. A very explicit look at human nature and mankind's ability to cope with disaster. I loved the writing style the author uses to make us feel we are witnessing things first hand. We are brought into the characters minds, and "see" through their eyes, the world as it decays. This is one story that will continue to live on in my mind for quite some time. It's riveting and compelling and I can't wait to see how it was adapted to the big screen. I give it 5 stars - for the basic premise, the excellent writing style, and the way we can actually picture what is happening around "us". A good read right into the night.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great for book club, Feb 24 2008
This review is from: Blindness (Paperback)
Our book club chose this book recently and almost everyone in our group loved it. It is a fascinating story and character study. A very interesting read and there are several themes that can be explored in a book club discussion. It is a great look at human nature in the face of adversity. The writing style is interesting as the characters are not given names only descriptions. Almost everyone who I've recommended this book too has found it a great read. I hear they are making it into a movie starring Julianne Moore and I hope they don't screw it up as Hollywood often does.
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Blindness
Blindness by Jose Saramago (Paperback - Oct 1 1999)
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