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Catch-22 | 
enlarge | Author: Joseph Heller Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £1.36 You Save: £6.63 (83%)
New (27) Used (31) from £1.36
Rating: 126 reviews Sales Rank: 669
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 576 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5 x 1.4
ISBN: 0099477319 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780099477310 ASIN: 0099477319
Publication Date: October 6, 1994 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: DESPATCHED FROM UK, BOOKS SHIPPED DAILY.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 121 more reviews...
Stunning September 3, 2008 S. J. Flook (Surrey, England) I must have read this novel at least ten times in my life and it conforms to my criterion for greatness: every time I read it: it changes. I read it every three or four years and the experiences I have gained since the last reading changes it, in many,varied and subtle ways. For me, it is the most important twentieth-century novel.
Papier-marmite August 29, 2008 Mr. J. A. Holmes (UK) I will start by saying that I simply can not understand how so many people have got so much out of this book. Being a fan of the hilarious 'Flashman papers' by George MacDonald Fraser, I thought I would give this a try, it being something completely different and having many rave reviews. After beginning to read it, there were a couple of genuinely funny moments in the first ten to fifteen chapters, but after that, the humour just bored me and made the book a complete chore to read. Granted, Heller has some very valid points that he makes in the book about the absurdity of humans going to war and the process of fighting itself. However, upon finishing the book, I just felt that the entire thing had been a muddle and the humour really did not appeal to me at all. One of the most infuriating points I found was that I absolutely hated every character in the whole book. I just could not feel for any of them. They were all annoying and about a third of the way through the book I was hoping Yossarian would just get shot down and have done with it. Oh yes, and the ridiculous names of all the characters was another niggle of mine. It may have been funny when this book was first published but it really hasn't aged well. This book, judging from the reviews on this site, is obviously the closest thing to papier-marmite as you can get. You really will either love it or absolutely hate it. Begin reading with caution - it's a long book!
Buying this for the second time... August 28, 2008 D. Pothecary (UK) ...because I have just worn out my first copy. Although this book is superficially about the end of the second world war, the central theme of losing control of one's destiny is surely more relevant today than it has ever been. For anyone struggling to find context for this book I would suggest reading the author's memoirs, Now and Then: From Coney Island to Here.
One of three June 24, 2008 William the Almost Great (Cork) 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
Believe it or not, my parents recommended this book to me. All I can say is, for once they were right. I've only read two other books that so blew me away in their conception and execution and those were "Clockwork Orange" and "Katzenjammer" by McCrae. But even those can't compare to "Catch 22. What a wild ride this well crafted book is. To say it's thought-provoking is a cliche, but there it is. Sort of like "1984" probably was before 1984. Some have likened this to MASH and the Korean war, and I can see those similarities, but the book is really meant to be read on a much broader level; a level of humanity in general and not one specific event or time period. The book is funny and challenging, but that seems to me to be what one would be looking for in a great novel. There's reason this book has been around for eons--it's simply a great novel that holds up to the test of time.
Precursor of MASH and more May 20, 2008 Dmitri M. A. Hubbard (Hong Kong) This is the original (at least in terms of modern relevance) satire of modern warfare and decision making. However, it achieves a level of humour very rarely achieved elsewhere. It is a very personal book, and some of the personal touch, sidesplitting jokes, and very dark serious undercurrent make this resonate more with me than some of the other great "political / moral" satires - Animal Farm and 1984 after all can leave you feeling somewhat cold.
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