Synopses & Reviews
A violent novel filled with insidious twists, follows the exploits of Richard Pearson, a rebellious, unemployed advertising executive, whose father is gunned down by a deranged mental patient in a vast shopping mall outside Heathrow Airport. When the prime suspect is released without charge, Richard's suspicions are aroused. Investigating the mystery, Richard uncovers at the Metro-Centre mall a neo-fascist world whose charismatic spokesperson is whipping up the masses into a state of unsustainable frenzy. Riots frequently terrorize the complex, immigrant communities are attacked by hooligans, and sports events mushroom into jingoistic political rallies. In this gripping, dystopian tour de force, J.G. Ballard holds up a mirror to suburban mind rot, revealing the darker forces at work beneath the gloss of consumerism and flag-waving patriotism.
Review
"Impressively packed with brilliant apercus." New York Times
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"Ballard, paradoxically, with all his characters gripped by obsession and necessity, is one of the great novelists of freedom." Observer
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"Starred Review. Ballard (1930-2009) creates a world reminiscent of and in this novel of suburban fascism... Ballard writes brilliantly about the nightmarish underside of modern life, and this novel makes us poignantly aware of the loss of his voice." New York Times Book Review
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"Nobody ever hated the contemporary world with as much intensity and conviction as J.G. Ballard... In e, Ballard's latest batch of preapocalyptic savages are happily clad in freshly ironed soccer jerseys and getting ready to fight for the only thing they believe in anymore -- shopping at the Metro-Centre... [T]here's a lot of irony in Ballard. If his late (and very funny) books sound peculiar to American ears, it's probably because of his very English tendency to play almost everything he says, however outrageous, at moderate to low volumes. Unlike the noisier, New Yorkerish avant-garde types who like to shock and awe their readers, Ballard doesn't shout or swear or get in your face. Even his most disturbing obscenities...are as mannered and concise and unimpassioned as a GPS device's soothing, digitally modulated voice describing how to reach the next gas station." Scott Bradfield
Review
"An assassination, an uprising and masses of people rallying to defend their sacred dome from attack. The temple they're ready to die for is the Metro-Centre shopping mall, which represents the only meaning in J. G. Ballard's biting, surreal vision of suburban London. "Consumerism is the one thing that gives us our sense of values," one local citizen says of the belief system he actually despises. (He turns out to be behind the putsch to reclaim their town from retailers.) The author of 18 novels including , Ballard, who died in 2009, is more funny than preachy; there's a certain glee in his spite, as when he writes about the slain leader of these devoted shoppers, the talk-show host of the mall's cable channel: "Only his hair survived, a blond mane lying across the phlegm-soaked pillow."" Kirkus Reviews
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"Ballard guides us through this unsettling environment, an exaggerated version of modern Britain, with a sure hand. His sentences, almost anthropological in tone, indicate a boiling over of tension... This is a novel about crowds--Don DeLillo would tip his hat in recognition--and the economic and social conditions that can be used to manipulate them. If the characters in seem indistinct by comparison; if David Cruise doesn't quite seem worthy of "the pale aura of suburban fame" that surrounds him--well, perhaps it's because from this remove, it's difficult to understand why people would launch into a melee over a waffle iron or camp out for a cell phone. But these things do happen, every year, and Ballard's novel is at its best when it takes this behavior to its most frightening, but strangely possible, extremes." Financial Times
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"No other writer so effectively alienates his readers--and his protagonists--from an everyday reality that he reveals to be shifting, often nightmarish terrain. At the same time, he soothes us. In , as in Ballard's short stories and in novels like , the rhythmical balance of the sentences has a tranquilizing effect, like the shushing roar of the ceaseless traffic on the motorway outside Brooklands.... In his final, elegiac vision of suburban apocalypse, Ballard once again allows us to imagine the unthinkable." Jacob Silverman The Daily Beast
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"...consumerism run amok deserves the pillorying it gets in . The connections Ballard finds between boredom and neo-fascism are fascinating and disturbing, and they are presented with an experienced satirist's deft art." Anna Mundow Barnes and Noble
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"This is the last book [Ballard] wrote before he died and both his most hilarious and his most terrifying, because it's about a racist middle-class revolt in the London suburbs that uncannily presage the rise of the real-life English Defense League, and also because the narrator is like an even more psychotic version of Richard Grant's character in ." Tristan Deveney The Millions
Synopsis
Never before published in America--J. G. Ballard's capstone novel, a thriller that envisions the collapse of our consumerist culture.
About the Author
Born in Shanghai in 1930, J. G. Ballard is the author of more than eighteen novels, including Empire of the Sun, The Drowned World, Crash, and Millennium People. He was catapulted to literary fame with the 1964 publication of The Drought. He died in London in April 2009.