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Point Counter Point

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Point Counter Point

Von: Aldous Huxley
Gesprochen von: Stefan Rudnicki
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Über diesen Titel

“Everybody strains after happiness, and the result is that nobody’s happy.”

In music, counterpoint is the art of writing melodies that play in conjunction with one another, according to a strict set of rules, in order to emphasize the melody by contrast. In debate, point/counterpoint is a means of persuasion in which the speaker begins by conceding to their opponent’s argument before refuting it wholeheartedly. Aldous Huxley follows these traditions in his masterpiece Point Counter Point. The polarity between passion and reason in the intellectual life of the 1920s is demonstrated both in form and in theme in Huxley’s ambitious satire: This complex novel darts around points of view to portray the convoluted nature of perception versus reality, and it boasts a large cast of characters that come together, almost as an orchestra, performing separate melodies that come together in one great symphony. Not only do these characters serve such a musical purpose in the plot, they also represent real life writers who were popular at the time, such as D. H. Lawrence, Katherine Mansfield, John Middleton Murry, and even Huxley himself (in the form of Phillip Quarles, the “novelist” within the novel).

Point Counter Point was named one of “100 Best Works of the 20th Century” by Modern Library.

Originally published in 1928.

Public Domain (P)2024 Blackstone Publishing
Klassiker Literatur & Belletristik Satire
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One gets carried away by Brave New World and the ease at which that book can be read. and re-read. Antic Hay and Point Counter Point left me disappointed. The latter was for me a modernist version of Eliot's Middlemarch - much talking and linguistic bravado but like any book, or movie for that matter, you need a plotline! Something to grab your attention and move the story forward. The very end of the book almost accomplishes this but by then it is all well and done. Joyce did the same thing in Ulysses but that book has a structure and complexity that one approaches it in a different manner.
The narrator does a good job for the most part, his German is not that good but that was more funny than bad, so thumbs up.

Sorry to say I had trouble finishing

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