The Bridge

Hardcover, 288 pages

Published July 5, 2001 by Little, Brown.

ISBN:
978-0-316-85854-0
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4 stars (4 reviews)

Orr, the otherwise unnamed protagonist of this Pynchonesque novel, is a successful Scottish engineer who's a bit fed up with life: his work doesn't really interest him anymore; years of doping and boozing have dulled him; his girlfriend has other lovers (he does too, but he would rather she was monogamous). Then one evening he crashes his classic Jaguar into a parked MG. The aftermath is coma and months of amnesiac trance, a condition that Orr apparently comes to prefer. The reader, however, only understands all this towards the end of the novel. Virtually the whole of the narrative consists of Orr's trauma-induced hallucinations. The bridge of the title is a fantastically ramifying construct in Orr's brain resembling an outer-space city in a science fiction movie. Banks's ( The Player of Games ) novel is satire, and its target turns out to be the British Isles' equivalent of American "yuppies." …

13 editions

Review of 'The Bridge' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Somebody’s been in a bad car crash. But before we get into that we’re whisked away to the story of an amnesiac adjusting to life on a giant bridge (which seems to have no end on either side and houses an entire, self-sufficient society). He dreams of a barbarian hero (hacking his way through adventures with a magical/high-tech familiar) and a progressive yuppie pining for the elusive love of his life in 70s/80s Scotland. As the story advances, the dreams cease to be treated as such and instead serve as narratives of their own.

It's quickly clear that all of the protagonists are supposed to be the same man (from the car crash), though I’m not sure how their individual stories (with the exception of the one that isn’t supposed to be a coma-induced fantasy) are supposed to mean anything outside of being interesting and entertaining. Banks places the burden …

Review of 'Entrefer' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Et zou, encore une critique spoilerisée, mais pas autant que la quatrième de couverture (qui soit dit en passant est une honte pour l’éditeur, Folio SF) qui révèle directement la fin de l’histoire, ne la lisez donc surtout pas.
Malheureusement pour moi, je l’ai lu, et je sais donc que dans ce roman de [author:Iain Banks], la réalité n’est pas ce qu’on croit. Il ne s’agit que d’un rêve, duquel le héros se réveillera à la fin. Naturellement, les plus dickiens d’entre vous me demanderont si le réveil mène à la réalité ou à un autre rêve … je n’en sais rien ! Toujours est-il que ce roman raconte la longue errance d’un amnésique, d’un barbare à l’ékritur franchment déliranth, et de quelques autres personnages que naturellement l’auteur va lier, d’une manière ou d’une autre (tout du moins c’est ce qu’on espère).
Est-ce de la sf ? Ben, moi je …

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4 stars

Subjects

  • Modern fiction
  • Fiction