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De Minotaurus neemt een rookpauze (2000)

door Steven Sherrill

Andere auteurs: Zie de sectie andere auteurs.

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7563329,474 (3.65)32
Five thousand years out of the labyrinth, the Minotaur finds himself in the American South, living in a trailer park and working as a line cook at a steakhouse. No longer a devourer of human flesh, the Minotaur is a socially inept, lonely creature with very human needs. But over a two-week period, as his life dissolves into chaos, this broken and alienated immortal awakens to the possibility for happiness and to the capacity for love. Steven Sherrill is a graduate of UNC Charlotte and holds an MFA in poetry from the Iowa Writers' Workshop. The recipient of a NEA Fellowship for Fiction, he has published four novels and one book of poetry. His debut novel,The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break, was published in the UK and translated into eight languages. Neil Gaiman selected it as one of six audio books to launch "Neil Gaiman Presents" for Audible.com. A prolific painter and nascent musician, Sherrill is now a professor of English & Integrative Arts at Penn State Altoona. " . . . [W]ry, melancholy, beautiful first novel . . . " --The Guardian "Sherrill's narrative, with its dreamlike pace, shows myth coexisting with reality as naturally as it does in ancient epic." --Publishers Weekly "Wise and ingenious" --The New York Times… (meer)
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    Littlemissbashful: Two books with two different takes on what happens to the old Gods and creatures of myth we leave behind. Tom Robbins delivers the usual multi-stranded story interwoven with flights of fantasy and a meditation on the 'seriousness of beats' while 'The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break' is the more low key minimalist story.… (meer)
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1-5 van 33 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
Hmmm... the obvious assumption is that this book is about a minotaur.

Okay, well, it IS about a minotaur, but it's more about the dullness and meaninglessness of a life in poverty and the normalization and internalization of mockery.

The minotaur hates himself as much as the haters hate him. But he only hates himself because he has been shaped to.

His actions and decisions are exactly human. There is nothing he does in this story that any person after a lifetime of mockery might do...

Not sure about the reviews referring to a lack of closure - this book closes. Is it happy ever after? Did the Minotaur get kissed by the princess and turn back from a frog to a handsome prince... no... but life doesn't offer that... ( )
  crazybatcow | Nov 2, 2023 |
“The architecture of the Minotaur’s heart is ancient. Rough hewn and many chambered, his heart is a plodding laborious thing, built for churning through the millennia. But the blood it pumps—the blood it has pumped for five thousand years, the blood it will pump for the rest of his life—is nearly human blood. It carries with it, through his monster’s veins, the weighty, necessary, terrible stuff of human existence: fear, wonder, hope, wickedness, love. But in the Minotaur’s world it is far easier to kill and devour seven virgins year after year, their rattling bones rising at his feet like a sea of cracked ice, than to accept tenderness and return it.”

Five thousand years on from apparently being killed by Theseus the Minotaur or M as he is known by his colleagues has escaped the labyrinth and is now working as a line chef in North Carolina. M leads an ordered lifestyle in a shabby trailer park, keeping to himself , keeping his horns down and simply trying to fit in in this new town.

Virtually all the characters in this book are regular, everyday, hard working, lower-middle-class human characters struggling to bring in a regular pay check, people are fired and new ones hired, some are cruel some are kind, some get injured at work, some move homes but all are simply trying to keep a roof over their heads and make a life for themselves. M is no different.

M is the proverbial elephant in the kitchen. He is the person people try to talk down to or ignore, the guy whom the bullies like to try and poke fun at and belittle. But despite his unfortunate deformity he pays his rent, fixes cars on the side and helps out his colleagues and neighbours. Whatever his past, he is now part of the great human herd trying to survive. He isn't going to die but he's got to make a living. M is a team player, who is good at what he does but different nonetheless.

Home is little better, an under-furnished trailer shaped like a boat. Most of the time, it is all the Minotaur can do to meet the day-to-day responsibilities of his own small world. Though a hybrid, M feels with the emotions of a man. He has needs and longings but his deformity makes them almost impossible to meet. He suffers in near silence, unable to escape and compelled to live on. His bargain with Theseus was no bargain. He endures and we are sad for him.

'The Minotaur Takes A Cigarette Break' is well written. The first half of the book is rather slow, mundane and nothing really happens but the second half kicks into gear; we know that M's life is about to change but whether or not its going to be for the better is kept under wraps. There are some funny scenes and there some sad scenes, it speaks of a world that seems unchanging from the outside but as human beings we know that that is never really the case. Sherrill doesn't try to give the reader any glib answers or pass judgments but gives us a new way to think about what it means to live within visible limitations. M has neither freedom nor hell but a limbo that stretches in time without end.

This book ia about what it means to be human and the use of a Minotaur in this way is an interesting device and really wasn't what I was initially expecting. If you want a fast paced plot then this really isn't for you but if you prefer your action slower and more considered then it's worth giving this novel a go. ( )
  PilgrimJess | Oct 22, 2023 |
My sky-high expectations for this book have become obscured to me now; the things which attract me to this kind of reshaped myth, however, are always present and were fulfilled here. Sherrill delivers a mythical character in a world with grease and trash and breath, a clear environment which fits with the fictional South tradition. The dust cover review promises relatability in the character of the Minotaur, and this was fulfilled with a replacement of his classical emotion with a modern sterility. M cannot act in his moments of crisis. The narrator presents bloody and explosive routes he would have taken in his heyday, but he has come to a point of paralysis. He watches catastrophes with a sensation that I am familiar with in crowds, and next to industrial equipment. It is a knowledge that harm will happen too fast, from unimagined directions, a feeling that humanity should be hopeless in the face of what it has made. Even social disasters seem to wash over him, his own powers even of moving or talking obscured beyond the reach of his imagination. Any obligation for him to act even to protect those he loves is presented as an outdated moral standard, some useless old ideal in a technological modernity he can neither fully experience nor escape.
He has become a modern man: he understands and functions in a reality of going to work every day and needing a place to sleep, yet his existence is built around traditional values he never grew out of. The irritations and limits of his physical body are made comic and pathetic by his bull configuration, but we all itch too much, we can’t see where we want to, and who can get words to come out right? It’s not a remaking of a specific myth. It’s a new novel which takes worn characters and puts them right in our world where we can get a straight look at them. ( )
1 stem et.carole | Jan 21, 2022 |
Many years ago I read (or rather, listened to) Visits from the Drowned Girl by Steven Sherrill (I think it may have been read by the same narrator). Despite the fact that the protagonist of that novel was not a mythological being, I have the sense that he was in all significant respects the same character as the Minotaur of this novel. Like Benny Poteat from Drowned Girl, at a critical juncture M behaves in a way so inexplicable, stupid, and morally appalling that I wasn’t quite sure how to feel about him or the novel after that. ( )
  Charon07 | Jul 16, 2021 |
This novel posits what would happen if mythological creatures still lived in our world. The minotaur tries to keep a low profile. He has a job as a line cook in a steak house working for cash under the table, lives in a run down trailer park and fixes cars on the side. Despite having the head of a bull, people view him the same as anyone else who may have a physical deformity or disability. Navigating the world with a pair of horns and an oversized head presents unique challenges. Fitting into things, self-care, clothing and relationships are things he barely manages to cope with. "M"'s daily adventures would make a cool movie with the advances in CGI. John Waters, are you listening? ( )
  varielle | Jan 20, 2020 |
1-5 van 33 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
Wise and ingenious as this novel is, its likability lies above all in its no-nonsense modesty, its distrust of showy gestures, the trudging optimism with which it evokes even the darker corners of humanity. We may think we have long given up our classical monsters for those made of flesh and blood, but the Minotaur gently reminds us that they very necessarily walk among us.
toegevoegd door SimoneA | bewerkNew York Times, Megan O'Grady (Dec 8, 2002)
 

» Andere auteurs toevoegen (6 mogelijk)

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Sherrill, Stevenprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
Graham, HolterVertellerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
Hutcheson, JamesOntwerperSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
Long Hampton, DebraOntwerperSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
McGowan, AlanIllustratorSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd

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Five thousand years out of the labyrinth, the Minotaur finds himself in the American South, living in a trailer park and working as a line cook at a steakhouse. No longer a devourer of human flesh, the Minotaur is a socially inept, lonely creature with very human needs. But over a two-week period, as his life dissolves into chaos, this broken and alienated immortal awakens to the possibility for happiness and to the capacity for love. Steven Sherrill is a graduate of UNC Charlotte and holds an MFA in poetry from the Iowa Writers' Workshop. The recipient of a NEA Fellowship for Fiction, he has published four novels and one book of poetry. His debut novel,The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break, was published in the UK and translated into eight languages. Neil Gaiman selected it as one of six audio books to launch "Neil Gaiman Presents" for Audible.com. A prolific painter and nascent musician, Sherrill is now a professor of English & Integrative Arts at Penn State Altoona. " . . . [W]ry, melancholy, beautiful first novel . . . " --The Guardian "Sherrill's narrative, with its dreamlike pace, shows myth coexisting with reality as naturally as it does in ancient epic." --Publishers Weekly "Wise and ingenious" --The New York Times

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