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C**R
More Carson Brilliance
Autobiography of Red ends on high note, with the Heracles, his boyfriend, and Geryon enjoying a South American trip (think the Burroughs "Queer" journey, but with far less money). Like Alan Hollinghurst skipping from 26 to 43 in the protagonist's narrative in "Our Evenings," Carson jumps far ahead in Heracles & Geryon's life for this sequel. So many poetic insights, so sympathetic an eye for PTSD-suffering Heracles, and Geryon's meek shepardly sense-making. I hope it is turned into a play or film.One tip: this work is much harder to follow than Autobiography of Red. So you may want to read Rachell Mindell's dissertation on it: "What is a Hole Made of: Queer Identity and Grief in Autobiography of Red and Red Doc>", before diving into Red Doc. Or after.
L**T
Brilliant!
Anne Carson’s novels-in-verse are some of my favorites, especially “Autobiography of Red.” When I heard she was continuing Geryon’s story I was thrilled, and “Red Doc” does not disappoint.First, you need to read “Autobiography of Red,” since it is Part One of Geryon’s story, and “Red Doc” is Part Two. Second, keep in mind this is Anne Carson. She never repeats herself. She always invents new experimental formats and structures for her books. And that’s exactly what she’s done with “Red Doc.”Third, this is one of those books you’ll need to read several times to fully appreciate the brilliance of her technique. The word music, the story detail, the innuendo, the history, all of it delightfully Carson.Truly, she is a master at writing her way around a story as if she were stitching an heirloom quilt. No one does it better!
A**L
Divine
I'm a fan of Carson so this is pure subjectivity. I also enjoy the Classic and myth and this is compatible with my admiration of Carson. This book is clever, beautiful, stunning, an object of beauty, 'and at every window the vague twilight / the black flakes of this / dayless day comes sifting / down....' Gorgeous.
R**R
Sub-par for Carson, but by no means a bad book.
"To live past the end of your myth is a perilous thing." I can't help but see a little wistfulness on Carson's part there. She's put out a huge amount of really good work, but her undeniably Great works were Glass, Irony & God, and then Autobiography of Red. She keeps turning out top-notch work, but it still can't match the heights she reached with those two books. She's sort of lived past the end of her own myth. Some artists flame out in a blaze of glory, and some of them stay alive, keep turning out quality work, even though their best is behind them.Buy this book. Read this book. It's good and you'll never regret taking the time out of your life for it. But don't expect it to be a reprise of Autobiography of Red. It's excellent in its own way, but it won't hit you nearly as hard as it's predecessor.
C**N
Too Good
Honestly one of my favorite books of all time. A montage of beautiful, upsetting, glorious moments that make the head spin. Perfect reading for the bus ride or the recliner.
L**R
I want to be Anne Carson when I grow up.
Things are on fire, and freezing. People are flying. There are bats, and velvet, cryptic mythologies, admonitions to not grow-up, death, and lots of other poetic brilliance from AC.
P**N
Remarkable
Be sure to read The Autobiography of Red, first. Red Doc> is the continuation, in a different key, of the poetic retelling of one of Hercules labors. Nothing I say can do justice to the power and depth of these works. Just read them.
K**R
Five Stars
beautiful book
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