The Drowned World Audiolibro Por J. G. Ballard arte de portada

The Drowned World

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The Drowned World

De: J. G. Ballard
Narrado por: Julian Elfer
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A new generation discovers "the most original English writer of the last century" (China Miéville, The Nation).

Appearing in audio for the first time, this neglected Ballardian masterpiece promises to be a touchstone for environmentalists the world over.

First published in 1962, J.G. Ballard’s mesmerizing and ferociously imaginative novel not only gained him widespread critical acclaim but also established his reputation as one of the finest writers of a generation. The Drowned World imagines a terrifying world in which global warming has melted the ice caps and primordial jungles have overrun a tropical London. Set during the year 2145, this novel follows biologist Dr. Robert Kearns and his team of scientists as they confront a cityscape in which nature is on the rampage and giant lizards, dragonflies, and insects fiercely compete for domination. Both an unmatched biological mystery and a brilliant retelling of Heart of Darkness - complete with a mad white hunter and his hordes of native soldiers - this “powerful and beautifully clear” (Brian Aldiss) work becomes a thrilling adventure with “an oppressive power reminiscent of Conrad” (Kingsley Amis).

©1962 J.G. Ballard. Copyright renewed 1990 by J.G. Ballard. Introduction copyright 2012 by Martin Amis (P)2013 Audible, Inc.
Ciencia ficción Postapocalíptico Ficción
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Will listen to this one again. I could feel the topical forest. Great take on the future.... from the 60s.

Great read from the 60s. Classic Stuff.

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MESMERIC INFLAMED DISK OF THE SPECTRAL SUN
This is the kind of book most editors and academia love. Nothing wrong with that, but if your just a regular Joe like me, you would like a plot. The language is beautiful and it is fun to daydream about this type of world. The first hour fulfilled that and it was great. To go from a poem to a novel, I need characters, a plot and something happening. This book had none of that. It was just a reaction to the watered world.

EGO AGAINST ID

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One of Ballard's smaller-scale novels, though I believe it is linked to a series of books with similar, environmentally themed stories. Amazing that he foresaw how important climate change would be, years before most people had even heard of the idea.

The writing of this thoughtful, psychological novel is very high quality, and I enjoyed listening to it, especially as read by the narrator. His pace and inflection are perfect, and the accents that he created for the dialogue are amazing. It's really a performance, not just a reading.

Prophetic story about climate change

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A good post apocalypse short story. I just didn’t take away anything new or groundbreaking. Maybe it’s because I am reading it in 2024 not the time it was written. Maybe it’s because something similar to this story is so ingrained as a nice version of the probable future.

Didn’t live up to the hype for me

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I’ve been looking forward to read this novel for a long time, unfortunately I was not impressed. Each chapter’s plot seems to get lost in the description of the scenario, the whole book was a big beat around the bush with only a couple of interesting moments. What made me listen to it till the end was the performance, brilliant! Compelling and poignant.

Great performance, curious story

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Ballard's last few novels very much predicted the world that we--or rather some of us--have lived in: technocrat neokiberalism gone amok, propped up by a media that doesn't really even pretend (very hard) to be honest anymore. We should be so lucky to live in the emotionally vacuous techno-psycho hellscapes from the last four Ballard novels. The Drowned World is nowhere as good as High-Rise, Unlimited Dream Company, Super-Cannes, or Ballard's later disaster novels The Drought or Hello America. But it's still the work of a surrealist master who wrote about death-dream isolation as no one else has ever done. The Amis introduction comes from a jealous Ballard wanna-be whose novels have none of the originality and unique strangeness that make Shanghai Jim's works feel like unnerving apocalypse poetry for the shellshocked survivors, or an infernal visitor-in-shadows, like quiet, coiled, complacency-shattering dream snakes with crimson eyes and ocean blue diamonds for scales. We're here for Ballard's artistry, not for the superfluous, egotistical introduction that has stunk up this audiobook as bad as did Neil Gaiman's unwanted LGB opening story to the Elric works of Ballard's friend Michael Moorcock.

Martin Amis Intro is Wrong

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Muy bien timely story for or Society and fun and recommended read maybe movie material

Timelessness

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This was one of the more unusual books I have ever read. Most science fiction tends to be focused on a scientific idea, which the author extrapolates out to the future to examine what the repercussions of this idea might be. Usually the repercussions examined are societal, or governmental, or even economic. But in this book, the repercussions are entirely personal. In about two short sentences, Ballard quickly dispenses with the “science,” explaining that there were some sun spots, these made the sun get hotter, all the ice on the Earth has melted, the continents have been drowned and all that is left of mankind is living near the north pole. The rest of the book follows various characters as they react to this new world, each in their own way, although all seem to be quite mad. Playing with the idea that Jurassic weather would bring up Jurassic memories from deep within the human brain, the author does a terrific job depicting how the hallucinogenic dreams and uterine longings of each character mesmerize them and draw them ever further into the growing jungle. There are many gorgeous descriptions of the landscape, the sunlight and the rising waters and the way nature is swallowing up the buildings, roads and other artifacts of human civilization. Even the somewhat cardboard villain serves an important purpose, showing that these artifacts are useless and trying to hold onto the past is a futile gesture. It is a lyrical and strange and lovely and haunting book with images I will not soon forget.

[I listened to this as an audio book read by Julian Elfer, who did an excellent job.]

Lyrical, strange, lovely, haunting

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This is a great book. It made my long drive shorter. I recommend it to who likes a bit of sci-fi and potential romance

great book

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I found this book easier to go through on the audible, then having read the book in the past. When I read the book in the past some of Ballard's words were quite difficult to get through. I find his fiction extremely good, and hope you try this book.

JG Ballard

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