Rating: Summary: Not the best Powers, but even so, great writing Review: A more limited view of the world than most Powers' novels, but an intelligent, analytic look at everyday family life. Read this after Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance or after Operation Wandering Soul. They are more profound books and will addict you to Powers. Then you can dally with Prisoners' Dilemma before moving on to the joys of Goldbug Variations--his hardest but most rewarding.
Rating: Summary: Extraordinary book. Review: After hearing the eighth or ninth person tell me that the end of Marquez's 100 Years of Solitude was incredible, I promised myself that I would never say that about a book. It sounds so affected, the kind of thing said by those people who always tell you that while musician x's incredibly high-selling album was good, it was no match for the previous, less heralded, one. All that said, this book was so good, and the ending so phenomenal, that I'm compelled, like a Republican committee chair whose self-imposed term limit is approaching, to violate my pledge.
Rating: Summary: An entertaining, thoughtful, and well-constructed novel. Review: At the urging of many friends, I finally picked up a novel by Richard Powers; I will never regret the long hours I spent reading and digesting The Prisoner's Dilemma. Although the plot is not as tightly-woven or as compact as I hoped, that is my only real (but minor) complaint about this book. Powers weaves an amazing tale that is both grandiose and haunting. The most skillful aspect of The Prisoner's Dilemna is the way in which Powers accurately represents the relationships between siblings. Having several siblings myself, I appreciate the delicacy with which Powers approaches these characters. Of course, the fact that the novel's plot and theme are virtual mind-trips is also a pleasing touch. This is an entertaining, thought-provoking, emotional, intellectual, and creative piece of fiction. I hope that the rest of his novels are as good or better than this; those I will be happy to give a full five stars!
Rating: Summary: the best amongst masterpieces Review: Having read the book appearing before and the books following this one, it's still my favorite of Powers's string of masterpieces. It seems to me of all his books the most effective balance of emotions -- it's his funniest and saddest book. Read all of his books but do youself a favor: read this one in a single sitting and without distractions: you will remember it vividly and for years.
Rating: Summary: It's Powers; what else need one say? Review: I am currently making my way through Powers's books in a mostly chronological manner. I gave this one four stars only because I preferred _Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance_ and _The Gold Bug Variations_ (read out of sequence, of course), but measured against most other writers' novels this would probably get five stars. As someone else said, it starts out more modestly, and I thought I wasn't going to get the mind-blowing intellectual and philosophical richness I had encountered in the two other books, but then Walt Disney and the Japanese-American internment enter the story and things get really strange. This guy is an amazing writer.
Rating: Summary: Issei, Bhagavad Vita, Von Neumann, Game Theory Review: I have yet to read "The Gold Bug Variations" and one other of this Author's works. However of the 5 I have read, this work was as good or better than the previous 4. Richard Powers writes with an expertise that is well above the norm, and his writing requires some adjustment, as his style is dense, his knowledge just shy of unbelievable, and the structures of his stories rarely follow a straight line."Prisoner's Dilemma" is much more than the title of this book. John Von Neumann and others utilized the concept when using game theory in real life planning for the US Government, amongst other times, during the Cold War. This is not in the book, so I spoil nothing for the next reader. "Issei, Nisei" and "Bhagavad Vita", and other bits I could not fit like Mickey Mouse, encompass facts they cannot be discussed, without at least hinting at what I think the plot is. I have included them as they are just of few of the dozens of concepts that Richard Powers has not only mastered, but also handles with such dexterity. As with all his books only the Author knows what he intends to create, what he hopes the reader will take from the experience. My thoughts are not meant to contradict others, just express my own. Ed Hobson Sr. is the story; his Family and others are the effects of his life experience. Mr. Powers is always playing with life's bigger questions, and under his pen they become even larger and more complex. For me the reference to Cornell was the key, the conclusions drawn from the book thereafter would make for great debate. The story is about evil, how we as individuals, and as the collective that is our race, deal with our actions and their results. The Protagonist is constantly compressing all he can into the present, whether the receiver is his own mind or that of his Wife And Children. The refrain of do what you can now, do what you can while you can, ties neatly into the dilemma that is the heart of the Prisoner's Dilemma, not as a book title but as game theory. I place my wallet on the table and challenge you to do the same. The proposition is that whoever has the least amount of funds gets all their opponent has, which is at least double what the winner started with. Play the scenario out as it was done in the book, and your initial decision to play or to refuse might surprise you. And therein lies the dilemma, the choices we make, the faith we place in other's choices, and what actually transpires or results is, I believe, what at least a good part of this characteristic wild ride that is a Powers work, is about. Your understanding may be completely different, and no less valid. His writing is an acquired taste, but once done becomes an addiction.
Rating: Summary: What Was That? Review: I recently finished reading Powers' first novel, "Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance", and liked it enough that I decided to try some of his other work. I did not choose a good book. I found Prisoners' Dilemma to be extremely complex. Unlike some of the other reviewers, I felt that the characters were the book's main strength - they are rich, conflicted and masterfully crafted. However the story totally lost me. The first 100 pages or so were engaging and interesting, but the novel kept getting stranger, until at the end I was no longer sure what was going on. The book is made up of stories within stories and themes within themes. It is so sophisticated that I simply missed the point (or else there was none)... I haven't given up on Powers yet, and I think will try one more of his books before making up my mind. I will say this much for him - he can craft a masterful sentence.
Rating: Summary: What Was That? Review: I recently finished reading Powers' first novel, "Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance", and liked it enough that I decided to try some of his other work. I did not choose a good book. I found Prisoners' Dilemma to be extremely complex. Unlike some of the other reviewers, I felt that the characters were the book's main strength - they are rich, conflicted and masterfully crafted. However the story totally lost me. The first 100 pages or so were engaging and interesting, but the novel kept getting stranger, until at the end I was no longer sure what was going on. The book is made up of stories within stories and themes within themes. It is so sophisticated that I simply missed the point (or else there was none)... I haven't given up on Powers yet, and I think will try one more of his books before making up my mind. I will say this much for him - he can craft a masterful sentence.
Rating: Summary: A fascinating story of micro vs. macro Review: If you're reading a novel which endeavors to link the lives of a Midwestern family in the late-1970s, World War II-era homefront politics, and Walt Disney, then you're going to want someone competent at the helm. On a superficial level, Richard Powers must be the man, since he's got a genius grant from the MacArthur foundation. Furthermore, he's adroitly constructed even grander Novels of Ideas like Galatea 2.2 and The Gold Bug Variations. His name inevitably comes up when critics are discussing the important young writers responsible for narrating our foray into the next millennium, along with William T. Vollman, David Foster Wallace, and Rick Moody-the "tall white male writers," as Wallace once put it.
But it took me a while to see what makes Prisoner's Dilemma the sprawling, history-rewriting novel of ideas it's been hailed as. For the first fifty pages or so, it reads like a comfortably traditional family novel reminiscent of Anne Tyler-which it is, on one of its multiple planes. But then Powers starts throwing in pseudo-factual flashbacks to the forties, with Walt Disney making wartime propaganda films (which he actually did, though not in the scope this novel suggests) and young Eddie Hobson (Sr.'s) eventual appearance in this surreal historical thread. In less capable hands, Prisoner's Dilemma would probably come off as very, very formulaic, and just plain all-been-done-before boring. What rescues it? Well, for one, Powers' prose is beautiful and compelling. This alone should save the novel from complete damnation. The language during the italicized wartime passages is omniscient and confident, assuring us we're in capable hands as we struggle to understand-via Artie, via Eddie Sr., via ... Mickey Mouse?-the monstrosity that was the Great War. The language during the chapters set in 1978 is, by comparison, rather objective, but it still has plenty of intrusive third-person commentary inserted, lending an existential lushness to such simple acts as setting the table or playing catch in the backyard. This refusal to take for granted the mundane characterizes Powers' treatment of the Hobsons' dilemma, and, in turn, Eddie Sr.'s life. The mysterious illness that ravages Eddie and confounds his family is a physical manifestation of the ongoing battle within Eddie-a relentless tension between the Big Picture and the plight of the individual. The universal struggle to understand how one little person can matter in the midst of an incomprehensibly vast cosmos-a dilemma we all experience at some point-is magnified and played out continually in Eddie to such an extent that it precludes his ability to function adequately in the "outside" world. The question of how humanity copes with the mounting onslaught of technological chaos is addressed repeatedly throughout Powers' narrative. During World War II, Powers recognizes that one of the greatest curative forces for Americans dealing with the war was, as it still is today, entertainment. In this case, the salve is Mickey Mouse and the whole Disney enterprise, enjoying its original heyday during the late thirties and early forties. Whole chapters are devoted to the role Disney played in the war, especially in the plight of the thousands of Japanese Americans interred Stateside. More generally, Powers describes Disney's function as a very early incarnation of the white noise in which we swaddle ourselves, in an attempt to keep out the horror we know is occurring out there: "[Mickey Mouse's] immense popularity must come from our learning, in a few years, how to ignore things that would have frozen previous generations with total horror" (98). Personified, as it is here, by such a congenial persona as Mickey Mouse and the rest of his Disney pals, it's hard to see how white noise could be all that bad. And Powers makes it clear that our relationship to the noise is ambivalent. We need it, and as much as we might decry it in attempts to elevate ourselves to more enlightened planes of world-awareness, we like taking refuge in Disney movies, or any incarnation of the entertainment noise we prefer. If the escapist quality of entertainment blossomed with Disney, and continued to grow throughout the seventies, when Artie is speaking, we in 2001 hardly need to be reminded how powerful and pervasive a mixed blessing it is now. Think of the samizdat in Infinite Jest that entertains its viewers into comas. Or, more immediately, consider the ways in which our country will-and already has-use pop culture as a psychological salve for the trauma of September 11.
Rating: Summary: Exquisitely touching, in an erudite sort of way Review: It seems that Powers is setting out to bring order to the whole world, and with "Prisoner's Dilemma" he brings the tangled fields of sibling relationships and ailing parents under his masterful control. As his fourth work that I've read I begin to see increasing number of similarities, ranging from mundane to profound, but all of them seem aimed at exploring the small corner of the world with which the given book is concerned. Here Powers does so expertly and movingly, drawing on decades' worth of American history while telling the story of one family caught therein. A worthwhile read for anyone concerned about the state of our country, families therein, or modern writers.
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