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The Yellow Arrow (New Directions Paperbook) (1993)

door Viktor Pelevin

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
2148126,394 (3.86)6
The main character, Andrei, is a passenger aboard the Yellow Arrow, who begins to despair over the trains ultimate destination and looks for a way out as the chapters count down. Indifferent to their fate, the other passengers carry on as usual -- trading in nickel melted down fro the carriage doors, attending the Upper Bunk avant-garde theatre, and leafing through Pasternak'sEarly Trains. Pelevin's art lies in the ease with which he shifts from precisely imagined science fiction to lyrical meditations on past and future. And, because he is a natural storyteller with a wonderfully absurd imagination.The Yellow Arrow is full of the ridiculous and the sublime. It is a reflective story, chilling and gripping.… (meer)
  1. 00
    The Zero Train door Yuri Buida (ateolf)
  2. 00
    The Ugly Swans door Arkady Strugatsky (leigonj)
    leigonj: These two books, both allegories about Russia, have something otherwise undefinably similar about them.
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Engels (7)  Frans (1)  Alle talen (8)
1-5 van 8 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
Learned of this book via "Philosophy for Passengers."

A mystical journey... the ending had an effect on me for sure. ( )
  tarantula7 | May 23, 2023 |
Amazing narrative. If you like Kafka, Cortazar, Cartarescu ... Dig in and enjoy. ( )
  eduardochang | Feb 3, 2022 |
I'm a big fan of Victor Pelevin, but I've never read the novella via which he first came to international attention. Until now, when I came across a sweet little used hardcover edition at the Powell's mothership on vacation in Portland last week. Which I then, while waiting for my sister and hostess to get off work, proceeded to take to the nearest pub and devour over a few pints of Guiness, not only because it is Pelevin, but because it is also another entry in that weird trope of fictions concerning perpetual railroads about which I have written here before.

The Yellow Arrow is the name of this train, crossing the wilds of the post-Soviet frontier but never actually reaching its possibly no-longer-existent destination. The train has been travelling for so long that most of its passengers no longer remember their lives before boarding it; indeed, many seem no longer to believe that they had lives before becoming passengers. A whole slightly Kafkaesque culture has developed on board, complete with histories, competing mythologies, secret societies and yes, black market economic cartels based around the strip mining of the train itself for raw materials. There is a news media, a secret governing cabal, even a set of peculiar funeral customs that, bizarrely, do not involve treating the bodies of the dead as more raw material for recycling and reuse; though the train never stops to take on supplies, some kind of basic carbon/nitrogen/water inputs are coming in from somewhere, even though we are assured there is no inhabited world outside the train anymore.

Pelevin is still kind of finding his voice here (this work was originally published in 1993), but already playing well with his themes of absurdity and willful ignorance and misplaced faith and trust and the way in which mass media manipulates reality. Its protagonist, Andrei, feels very much like an early sketch of his later hero, Babylen of Homo Zapiens fame, somewhere between a naif and a sophisticate in the ways of his world, not sure he should trust his friends, not sure if they are his friends, but willing to do what he has to in order to make it all work for him somehow. If it's not quite as wickedly funny as Pelevin's later works, it's plenty philosophical, impossible not to read as a parable of both Soviet and post-Soviet Russia (masterfully and weirdly, it manages to be both at once), and enjoyable. I wouldn't recommend it as an introduction to Pelevin -- I still think that should be Omon Ra -- but if you've found you've liked his other works and curious to have a peek at his beginnings, this is a must-see. ( )
  KateSherrod | Aug 1, 2016 |
Transcendental blah blah but interesting in a chop chop train sort of way ( )
  jnmwheels | Apr 3, 2016 |

The book consists of 3 novellas (the title of the first one is on the cover, and rightly so, as it's probably the most striking) and a number of short stories. All of it is full of allegory, metaphors, is often deeply philosophical; all of it is open to interpretation. I will not claim I've understood all what Pelevin means. Maybe on the second or third read, or maybe never - but somehow it just seems OK. It's like New Age philosophy meets science fiction with a helping of fantasy. (And I am not a fan of fantasy, but here somehow it didn't bother me).

The style of writing is very approachable and easy to read, even though loaded with deepest meaning (I expected a heavier style,​ so it ​took me by surprise),​ not to mention it sort of eggs you on - to see what Pelevin will come up with next. I missed only one novella: it had computer games in its premise, and I am neither interested no​r​ good at it. There is a romantic and idealistic touch, there are some real shockers - like in the review he writes on the book about Stalin. Some things Pelevin​ describes seem plausible and implausible at the same time, some are utterly incongruous. There are trips into solipsism. But I never once lost interest or was bored. ( )
1 stem Clara53 | Oct 13, 2013 |
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Wikipedia in het Engels (1)

The main character, Andrei, is a passenger aboard the Yellow Arrow, who begins to despair over the trains ultimate destination and looks for a way out as the chapters count down. Indifferent to their fate, the other passengers carry on as usual -- trading in nickel melted down fro the carriage doors, attending the Upper Bunk avant-garde theatre, and leafing through Pasternak'sEarly Trains. Pelevin's art lies in the ease with which he shifts from precisely imagined science fiction to lyrical meditations on past and future. And, because he is a natural storyteller with a wonderfully absurd imagination.The Yellow Arrow is full of the ridiculous and the sublime. It is a reflective story, chilling and gripping.

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