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Engleby

Engleby

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Author: Sebastian Faulks
Publisher: Vintage
Category: Book

Buy New: £3.39



New (13) Used (14) from £2.19

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 85 reviews
Sales Rank: 426586

Media: Paperback
Edition: Airport / Export Ed
Pages: 342
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6 x 1.2

ISBN: 0091794951
EAN: 9780091794958
ASIN: 0091794951

Publication Date: May 3, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Engleby
  • Paperback - Engleby
  • Paperback - Engleby
  • Paperback - Engleby (Vintage International)
  • Hardcover - Engleby
  • Hardcover - Engleby (Charnwood Large Print)
  • Paperback - Engleby

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Customer Reviews:   Read 80 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Tense and Utterly Readable   September 24, 2008
Mrs. K. A. Wheatley (Leicester, UK)
Having only read Birdsong by Faulks previously and not having enjoyed it much I was reluctant to try this until a friend positively forced it on me. It is very, very different in style and content from Birdsong. It is dark, lucid and modern in tone unlike the Proustian romance of Birdsong.

This is the first person, diary account of the life of Mike Engleby a strange, anti social young man from an impoverished background who through his peculiar intellectual skills manages to rise from obscurity to secure a good place at university and then later as a successful journalist. The story mainly concerns Engleby's obsession with a young woman he meets at university, her disappearance in his final year and what impact this has on him in his future life.

It becomes increasingly dark as the narrative continues and is quite brutal at times, although never in a gratuitous way. Faulks uses these moments of lucid violence as wake up calls and punctuation marks in the narrative, allowing us the reader to see the story in a new and more revealing light.

A fascinating, well written although macabre book. It reminded me very much of John Fowles' novel; The Collector, which I heartily recommend if you like this.



4 out of 5 stars Inside Engleby's head   September 22, 2008
Damian Patrick Kelly (Manchester UK)
Mike Engleby is an intelligent working class lad from Reading who has a low opinion of much of humanity. He is an unreliable narrator and reading his account you get the feeling gradually that there is more going on than he is telling you or more than he himself is aware of. In this respect it reminded me quite a lot of Mark Haddon's "Curious incident of the dog in the night-time."

It is not easy to comment on this book without giving away much of the plot. So I will restrict myself to saying that it is well worth reading and you really feel as though you have spent some time inside the head of another human being (an eccentric, interesting and often disturbing one).



1 out of 5 stars hand me a torch - it's too dark to read this far up the rectum   September 15, 2008
Eulalia Bannister (Scotland)
0 out of 3 found this review helpful

After an engaging and even charming start, this novel slowly and excruciatingly spiralled into freefall.
The classic 'bullied at public school' intermezzoes were well trodden ground and it soon became clear that Engleby is someone we should be seriously worried about rather than engage with. After that, the author adds nothing new to the cliche. Engleby just becomes increasingly ranting and irritating and we are forced to endure it.
I personally lost interest completely after the all too obvious disappearance of Jennifer. What plot, what suspense are other reviewers talking about?! The guy is not quite right in the head and there is no question he killed her. Since we are at that point not really emotionally involved with the Jennifer character (bland middle-class nice girl), I could not really get myself to care. Sorry.
What follows is a tedious tale written in a style so patronising and self indulgent that I wonder whether the author actually shares most of Engleby's distorted values in secret. How often do we have to be told how clever and witty the writing is? And Faulks must have really not enjoyed the time he spent investigating the minute details of drug abuse if he has to ram his intimate knowledge so far up our throat so repeatedly. (If you really want to know what it feels like to be on drugs, perhaps Ginsberg might be more eh...authentic...)
I could go on, but I don't want to repeat myself in as many variations on a theme as the author did in this novel.
By roughly page 80 I was bored and felt emotionally unengaged. Call me cold hearted, but this one didn't do it for me folks.



5 out of 5 stars Brilliant   September 12, 2008
Roselynn (West Sussex, UK)
In the same way that Atonement is McEwan's best but is not typical of his writing, Engleby is Faulks' best book so far but is quite unlike Birdsong and Charlotte Gray. I couldn't put this book down and I will definitely read it again - something I rarely do. I'm not sure I'd describe the plot as predictable because Faulks gently leads you all the way and so you're never quite sure if he's misleading you or not. There is a twist at the end that is so delicate in its touch that it transforms the book and leaves you thinking about it for days.


4 out of 5 stars Unusual   September 6, 2008
Top Banana (Kent)
I have only read one other Faulks novel: Birdsong, which was set in the First World War. This one is completely different in style, setting and era, which suggests some versatility on the author's part.

I enjoyed it. The narrative is humourous in a sardonic way. The dry wit comes out on the very first page and continues throughout, contrasting nicely with the chilling turn of events. Engleby is a misfit, a human island who is worryingly detached from events going on around him. His psychology is the centrepiece of the book. Everything builds up slowly but steadily, finally unravelling to a conclusion that confirms the reader's earlier suspicions but is powerful nonetheless.

Like other reviewers, I liked the period detail too.


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