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Interviews | November 3, 2009

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Platform

by Michel Houellebecq

Platform Cover

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Michel Renault is a human void. Following the death of the father he barely knew, he endures his civil service job while eking out an existence of prepackaged pleasure, hollow friendships, TV dinners, and pornography. On a group holiday in Thailand, however, he meets the shyly compelling Valérie, who soon pursues an agenda that Michel himself could never have thought possible: his own humanization.

Back in Paris, they plunge into an affair that strays into S&M, public sex, and partner swapping, even as they devise a scheme to save Valérie's ailing travel company by capitalizing on the only trade Michel has seen flourish in the Third World. Before long, he quits his job, and their business model for "sex tourism" is gradually implemented. But when they return to Thailand, where Michel's philosophy will be put into practice, he discovers that sex is neither the most consuming nor dangerous of passions...

From a suburbanized West crippled by hate crime to an East subsumed by materialism, Michel Houellebecq explores — with characteristic provocativeness, but also with surprising tenderness — the emotions that seem most resilient to any influence: love and hate. Platform is, as Anita Brookner has written, "a brilliant novel, casting a prescient eye on the abuses and inequalities that lead to wider trouble."

Review:

“Howard Stern meets Albert Camus in this novel of sex and alienation . . . Houellebecq has sharp observations about ennui in the Western world and rage in the Muslim one.”

Kyle Smith, People

Review:

"[A] pale imitation of [Houellebecq] at his scandalous and probing best....Posturing, silly, sophomoric — though the glib Houellebecq is good at trying to make you think otherwise." Kirkus Reviews

Review:

“The talented, cynical Houellebecq blasts Western culture and Islam in his odd, subversive entertainment.”

Carlo Wolff, The Boston Globe

Review:

“A novel at once brilliant, charming, puzzling, annoying and sometimes downright repulsive . . . The work of a highly talented writer.”

Jean Charbonneau, Cleveland Plain Dealer

Review:

“Astute, graceful, sexually preoccupied . . . Houellebecq rewards with glimpses through his particularly keen lens.”

Arthur Hirsch, The Baltimore Sun

Review:

“Houellebecq writes with an honesty and an anomic conviction that raises his novels, beyond any single troubling moment, toward genius.” —Toronto Globe and Mail

Review:

“A novel at once brilliant, charming, puzzling, annoying and sometimes downright repulsive . . . The work of a highly talented writer.”
Jean Charbonneau, Cleveland Plain Dealer

Review:

“Calculated to poke, prod, engorge, enrage and amuse. . . . It’s dangerous in the way that literature is meant to be dangerous—that is, it awakens neglected sensibilities.”The New York Observer

“Houellebecq’s writing has a raw, disquieting brilliance. . . .It’s ‘genius.’”—The Washington Post

Review:

“Howard Stern meets Albert Camus in this novel of sex and alienation . . . Houellebecq has sharp observations about ennui in the Western world and rage in the Muslim one.”
Kyle Smith, People

Review:

“Blunt, arrogant, coolly detached, ultra-sophisticated, impeccably and simply presented, intellectually self-assured and very self-conscious . . . This is the real thing, the kind of novel that ends up in the canon.”

Michel Basilières, The Toronto Star

Synopsis:

Houellebecq's The Elementary Particles ("a brilliant novel of ideas" — The Wall Street Journal) was awarded the IMPAC Prize in 2002. His new novel is the story of Michel Renault, a bureaucrat who prefers his pleasures prepackaged, until he pursues the awkward and attractive Valerie.

Synopsis:

In his new work, Michel Houellebecq combines erotic provocation with a terrifying vision of a world teetering between satiety and fanaticism, to create one of the most shocking, hypnotic, and intelligent novels in years.

In his early forties, Michel Renault skims through his days with as little human contact as possible. But following his father’s death he takes a group holiday to Thailand where he meets a travel agent—the shyly compelling Valérie—who begins to bring this half-dead man to life with sex of escalating intensity and audacity. Arcing with dreamlike swiftness from Paris to Pattaya Beach and from sex clubs to a terrorist massacre, Platform is a brilliant, apocalyptic masterpiece by a man who is widely regarded as one of the world’s most original and daring writers.

About the Author

Michel Houellebecq’s The Elementary Particles, an international best-seller, won the prestigious Prix Novembre in France as well as the lucrative International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. He lives in Ireland.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780375414626
Translator:
Wynne, Frank
Publisher:
Random House
Translator:
Wynne, Frank
Author:
Houellebecq, Michel
Location:
New York
Subject:
General
Subject:
Literary
Subject:
Social life and customs
Subject:
France
Subject:
French fiction
Copyright:
Edition Number:
1st American ed.
Series Volume:
107-625
Publication Date:
July 15, 2003
Binding:
Hardcover
Language:
English
Pages:
272
Dimensions:
9.52x6.60x1.17 in. 1.26 lbs.

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