Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison REVIEW

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TheBookchemist

TheBookchemist

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 47
@timkjazz
@timkjazz 6 жыл бұрын
Pure, unadulterated brilliance! What Ellison was able to do with a straight-forward tale, showing the complexities of racism, is astonishing in this huge, sprawling work of pure art. In the argument as Great American Novel.
@MorbidGuardian
@MorbidGuardian 7 жыл бұрын
About halfway through this myself. I'm really enjoying it and I'm excited to finish it.
@JosBooks
@JosBooks 7 жыл бұрын
This just went from being one of the classics on my bookshelf that I regularly put off reading to something I'm actually really excited to read.
@1970-j6v
@1970-j6v 7 жыл бұрын
Great story, memorable characters and some of the greatest dialogue I've ever seen in my boring life, The Invisible Man is such a good novel, that the creator never made another one ever again.
@PolarBearKing10
@PolarBearKing10 7 жыл бұрын
I just finished this book two days before you posted this review. Excellent timing! I think your statements about the book are spot on. You can't avoid having an opinion after reading this book, it demands a response from you. From what I've seen of your videos, you have a valuable perspective and solid understanding of literature. Thanks for sharing it. Personally, I didn't want to put the book down and didn't find it difficult. Knowing what happened to the narrator felt really important to me. I loved Ellison's use of imagery motifs, like blindness (blindfolds, blind preacher, false eye, etc.) because it helped tie the otherwise chaotic story together quite well. Also, the main character has such visceral responses (intense anger and bitter laughter are his usual reactions to people) that I was able to have appropriately intense feelings about the disgusting things he witnessed. However, I think the saddest thing for me was when the main character didn't react. He was numb to truly horrendous events in the early part of the novel. He would grow angry to defend the conscience of white men, but when he or others of color were being abused and mistreated he didn't seem to care. That awful conditioning on a young mind was the most disturbing thing I witnessed in the book and was expertly handled by Ellison.
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
It's true that those parts are absurdly disturbing, also when he's being - basically - tortured but all he thinks about is impressing rich white folks, so that he can have a good life. Truly what a messed up world.
@matthewwohl951
@matthewwohl951 5 жыл бұрын
This is a great review. Just finished the the book today, and you articulated the spirit of the novel so well. The way I put it to my students and friends is that the Plot feels writen by Kafka, the style and dialects of characters is virtuosic and oddly humorous with similarities to Twain and Pynchon, and the sincerity and alarm, especially w/r/t race, is direct and powerful similar that Baldwin’s and Wright’s (and of course other black writers of his ilk) writing. Thanks for the review!
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you Matthew, what a nice comment! You must have some really awesome students if they can follow all those references :D!
@blodwynswayze1531
@blodwynswayze1531 7 жыл бұрын
From beginning to when he leaves the university is just the most incredibly powerful writing. From there I'd say it gets a little more diffuse but still a stone classic. Pale Fire coming soon?
@AroidVibesOnly
@AroidVibesOnly 4 жыл бұрын
I just started reading this! So far it's great! Awesome video!
@tomkingmy5596
@tomkingmy5596 7 жыл бұрын
I'll come back to this video in 2 weeks, I have to read this book for my 20th Century African American Literature course and I'm really curious about your opinion
@SevenFootPelican
@SevenFootPelican 4 жыл бұрын
I read the book in 3 days and found it amazing.
@skatemore6108
@skatemore6108 7 жыл бұрын
Bookchemist, have you read any Toni Morrison? I feel like you'd really enjoy her work - she was a big Faulkner fan and her writing contains a very lyrical stream of consciousness mixed with a lot of really poignant insight on being a black woman in the US in the early/mid 20th century. I recommend The Bluest Eye
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the recommendation man! So far her only novel I've read is Beloved, and it's one of the best ghost stories I've ever read (besides being, of course, so much else).
@bigman7933
@bigman7933 2 жыл бұрын
I know it’s a book focused on race, but I feel that it picks up on universal truths about identity and how you’re perceived by the world. I’m a white European and it actually felt very relatable broadly, I’m certain these feelings are intensified for African Americans however. As far as existential stories go I think it’s my favourite, above Sartre’s and Camus’.
@FCCZJ1903
@FCCZJ1903 7 жыл бұрын
Well, this is a fun coincidence! I read Invisible Man just this week, and submitted an essay on the politicisation of life and death to my supervisor earlier tonight. My copy (same edition as yours) is about 8 cm away from the screen on which I'm watching this, so this is very appropriate. Any reason you decided to read it at this moment? I found this book really affecting, because - you're right - it avoids simplicity. And Tod Clifton's death, the funeral crowd, the sloganising... talk about 'as current as ever'! I don't think it's a difficult novel per se, but it's certainly dense - though not overcrowded. There are some great characters (Bledsoe, Emerson jr. - little nod to Ralph Waldo -, Ras the Exhorter). The plot is, as you say, thrilling, so I didn't find the reading tedious at all. In fact, I read it more quickly than I do most novels of that size. Part of this had to do with the fact that this, to me, was one of those works of fiction that ring so true that their problems, personal and political, don't feel confined to the fictional sphere. I ended up thinking about 'the real world', e.g. Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, the Black Panther Party, Rubin Carter, etc. Finally, there's this great underlying question which is a bit unsettling, but definitely important: is life always political? For everybody? For the oppressed? For the famous? For me?
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
Some excellent points! One of the most heartbreaking points in the book is that indeed not all of us can affod NOT to be political :) as for why I'm talking about it now, can you keep a secret? I led a seminar class on this novel a few weeks ago!
@FCCZJ1903
@FCCZJ1903 7 жыл бұрын
Your secret is safe!
@olegdepapa
@olegdepapa 7 жыл бұрын
This book is not about racism, it is about racial identity. This book is about the repossession and the reclaiming of the past, tradition, the artifacts that black people lost as part of their identity from the South, and through Booker T, to finally fuse the DuBoisean double-consciousness into a single one without having to play the puppet, but to be able to stand on one’s own two feet and appreciate one’s own race, and past of slavery, with God, with the yam, with the music - the blues, jazz, with sexuality, oppression. It is to allow for black people to be black within a white society - to sing if they want. To see the past as a sense of strength.
@martincelino
@martincelino 4 жыл бұрын
This book is about racism because one cannot talk about racial identity apart from racism.
@dannnnydannnn5201
@dannnnydannnn5201 4 жыл бұрын
Finished this last week for a class I was taking and can’t stop thinking about it. I found it to be incredibly powerful and relatable in many ways. Ellison definitely captures a lot of the nuances in race relations that may on the surface, seem to be one way, but underneath the surface are in fact not what they appear. Although the book’s subject matter is heavy, I thoroughly enjoyed Invisible Man and found the narrative itself to be fairly simple to follow. It’s the emotional aspect that takes a bit of a toll.
@karmaking1263
@karmaking1263 4 жыл бұрын
Great job my friend
@keithwittymusic
@keithwittymusic 7 жыл бұрын
What edition of the book is that? I like the look of it (I'm a bit of a book cover junkee).
@VisualFeast7557
@VisualFeast7557 7 жыл бұрын
This one: www.amazon.co.uk/d/cka/Invisible-Man-Penguin-Essentials-Ralph-Ellison/0241970563/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1487602689&sr=8-2&keywords=Invisible+Man+by+Ralph+Ellison
@zebrahead89
@zebrahead89 7 жыл бұрын
really nice cover
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
It's the Penguin Essentials edition, they gave a few classics some fancy covers. I love good covers too! Italian editions tend to be the driest things, and there's a place in Milano called The American Bookstore that feels like walking into fucking Oz.
@billypilgrim1
@billypilgrim1 7 жыл бұрын
Read "The Visible Man" by Chuck Klosterman
@robertvaughan4915
@robertvaughan4915 2 жыл бұрын
Generally I had no problem staying intersted while reading the book. It starts out well with im getting in trouble driving Norton and the Bedsoe sending him to NYC. I thought it was apalling what Bledsoe did to him with the reference letters he gave out. Hence, it kept me intersted all the way through enough. The only portion where I had trouble trying to keep reading was after he falls into the man haole and he starts talking various philosophical things but I bore it through to the end. I think I understood the gist of this book but I have to admit some of his points could be intrepreted other ways. The book is clearly about race relation and how blacks and white perceive each other. But there some points which are kind of vague to me, such as invisible man. I guess I am one of those who is slow on the uptake but he kept throwing it in different directions in my opinion. I would not recommend this book for he lay person. I would only suggest this to people who want a challenge in a philosohpical, psycholigical, and sociological aspect. It is not boring but its points are not clear but not all literature is.
@jennifer5512
@jennifer5512 2 жыл бұрын
Great review of a brilliant book. I don't get why people call it boring.
@n.b.2164
@n.b.2164 7 жыл бұрын
How many hours in a day do you spend reading?
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
0 to 3 (4 or 5 if it's summer, sometimes 6 if I have stuff to read for my research or a deadline). On average though, rarely more than 1, and on several days that's a perfect 0.
@patricejones8799
@patricejones8799 7 жыл бұрын
I am currently reading Invisible Man. I like your review. It is a rather dense book, but it is not boring and not hard to read. I am rather ashamed that I waited so long to read it. And, I would disagree with you on the comment about it not being a classic. I believe it is an African American classic for sure.
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
I agree! What I meant in the video about it reading "like a classic" was related to the fact that it's heavy and dense, like lots of classic literature (as in, say, pre-20th Century) tends to feel.
@patricejones8799
@patricejones8799 7 жыл бұрын
The_Bookchemist Oh, okay. No problem. I understand. Thanks for the reply.
@browngirlreading
@browngirlreading 7 жыл бұрын
Great review! Definitely a great American classic. I do agree that it is extremely dense, but worth the read if one takes the time to read it. Have you read Native Son? Now that one will get a good discussion on race going.
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
I have! It was years ago and I liked it a lot, although perhaps it's a bit less subtle in the way it handles politics and the relationship between the left and African Americans than Invisible Man is. Overall they're very different books, but equally visceral and upsetting (in the best of ways).
@browngirlreading
@browngirlreading 7 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@axelm2062
@axelm2062 7 жыл бұрын
hey bookchemist, what watch is that?
@TheBookchemist
@TheBookchemist 7 жыл бұрын
It says on the dial it's a Daniel Wellington! It was a graduation present.
@anderswhitefish4009
@anderswhitefish4009 4 жыл бұрын
It is interesting how the meeting place of The Brotherhood is the Chthonian, perhaps a reference to H.P. Lovecraft, a horror/sci-fi/fantasy writer from the early 20th century, a contemporary of Ellison. Could this be an allusion to a secret dark cult, impending doom, or unnameable horror? Such as Brother Jack's glass eye in the bottom of his glass looking at the narrator? Also interesting how in Saul Bellow's review of the novel he mentions how The Brotherhood are communists but it isn't explicitly stated as such in the novel, only implied. If they merely stood for racial equality, what exactly made them outright Communists? It seems that their ultimate goal was not to unite the races, rather to objectify African Americans to attain an uncertain goal.
@PasserbyP
@PasserbyP 3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic review, we share the same thoughts and you put it so eloquently. This is a very important book in today's political climate.
@ayeayemyoepge6409
@ayeayemyoepge6409 6 жыл бұрын
I wanna watch by English subtitle
@martiesmysteriouspickle2345
@martiesmysteriouspickle2345 7 жыл бұрын
I like ur vids
@DeltaGhostSquad
@DeltaGhostSquad 7 жыл бұрын
Finally. A book that I can relate to lol
@i1945us
@i1945us 4 жыл бұрын
Racism or prejudice?
@Goldengoods1111
@Goldengoods1111 6 жыл бұрын
I am a BLACK woman and this book is REALLY hard for me to read...
@anderswhitefish4009
@anderswhitefish4009 4 жыл бұрын
Please tell me what about it makes it hard for you to read?
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