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Paperback Still Life with Woodpecker Book

ISBN: 0553012606

ISBN13: 9780553012606

Still Life with Woodpecker

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$5.69
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Book Overview

"Robbins's comic philosophical musings reveal a flamboyant genius."--PeopleStill Life with Woodpecker is a sort of a love story that takes place inside a pack of Camel cigarettes. It reveals the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

A book a will keep forever

A beautiful complex story about a red headed princess. This book had helped with expanding vocabulary and mind. 10/10 recommended

Life changing experience? Definitely

This book... there are no words to describe this book, other than the words, hidden on a pack of Camel Cigaretts. CHOICE is one of the most powerfull mesages that the Argonian redheads could muster throught the interdimensional rift between where they were exiled and where we live. The word embodies this book, you have a CHOICE to make. Do you want this book to change your life? Do you want to understand the purpose of the moon? Do you want to find yourself looking at redheads in a new light? Are you ready to find out exactly what love is, how to find it, and the ways to make it stay? Believe me I will never look the same at the moon. I can truely tell you, that I know why love doesnt stay for most. I too am going to become a missionary for this book, reccomending, and giving it to people. It really has been a life changing experience, and I am gratefull to my friend for telling me to read it. I have never taken as much care to read every single word carefully, to understand every single sentence in a book, nor have I ever taken this long to read one. I read it off and on for 4 months. I have never felt so good when finishing a book as I did with this one, it was an accomplishment, like ending up where you intended after an adventure, but still bieng enriched by the experience, and gaining new wisdom and knowledge from it. I do not mean to attack the people who have written the other reviews, but if you didnt like this book you obveously didnt get the point, or scope of it, or are too narrow minded to look at it from multiple perspectives and read the underlying connections throughout the book. I am both happy and proud to say that I have, since reading this book been mistaken for a redhead. Perhaps its all the snappy quotes I have picked up from the book, or the new insight on how to look at inanimate objects. The book ends so well, that even if I wanted to ruin the book for you and tell you what happens, it wouldnt work, because the point of the book isnt at the end, its throughout the book, the end is just the time where the pieces fall into place. The most affecting part of the book for me was the powerfull last 2 quotes. Eerily potent and appropriate. i picked up this book expecting a good story, I ended up with much much more.

All things are connected.

"Read this book," I was told about fifteen years ago, "it will change your life." I read it and now distribute the book much like a missionary. While picking up several copies near the holiday season several years ago, the pretty redheaded cashier looked at me and said, "Have you read it? "It changed my life," I told her. "I know," she said, "it changed mine." (The book holds special significance for redheads.) Such is the apparent cult following of this work and this author. Will it change your life? Maybe. Not everybody gets it; but everybody I have ever discussed the book with enjoyed it immensely. What's the attraction? The book begins with the premise that "the last quarter of the twentieth century was a severe period for lovers," and suggests "only one serious question exists: Who knows how to make love stay?" What follows is a whimsical and zany love story. The answer to the question is not directly revealed, but the formula for its solution is provided. Yet, not everybody gets it. The chapters are chopped up into relatively short narrative syllogisms, each proving a philosophical point. The author even taunts the reader about a third of the way into the story admonishing that "just when you thought you were settling into a good story, you realize philosophy is what you're getting." I have examined and studied the phenomena of this book and have come to the conclusion that, when reduced to its essence, it is Jungian philosophy disguised as kitsch entertainment. Jungian philosophy: the collective unconscious -- everything is connected. But Robbins takes aspects of such theory to the moon and beyond, and entertains the implication that truly all things are connected. The notion that consciousness is everywhere has been dubbed panpsychism by modern philosophy. Panpsychism, although not identified as such, is a recurrent theme in all of the author's subsequent works: it's his thing: "A camels pack, Adolph's Meat Tenderizer - almost all inanimate objects - are transparent doors to experience, if you know how to look through them." [p. 253] "There is meaning in everything, all things are connected. [p. 254] If you do not believe this read the author's next novel, "Skinny Legs and All," where three of the main protagonists are a fork, a spoon and a stick. Although the author never uses the word, Robbins is imploring us to live outside the paradigm, which includes thinking, loving and feeling outside the paradigm. Embrace so-called insanities: "There are essential and inessential insanities. The latter are solar in character, the former are linked to the moon. Inessential insanities are a brittle amalgamation of ambition, aggression, and pre-adolescent anxiety - garbage that should have been dumped long ago. Essential insanities are those impulses one instinctively senses are virtuous and correct, even though peers may regard them as coo coo. Inessential insanities get one in trouble with one-self. Essential insani

"Still Life" crammed with amazing insight on human relations

Initially a fan of such classics as "Anna Karenina" and "Brothers Karamazov" I expanded my literary horizon to unthinkable boundaries after Tom Robbins' "Still Life With Woodpecker" fell into my hands. Robbins' insight on human behavior on both a social and intimate level along with satyrical humor and an outrageous plot make for a perfect blend. Robbins tells the story of a red-haired princess who falls for a rebelious bomber and their effort of "making love stay." The story line ranges from bizzare Argon aliens vacationing in Hawaii to Emirate sheiks building commercialist pyramids. Robbins' vivid imagination and outrageous similes paint a classic love tale in a crazy psychedelic picture. His original diction, and odd "interludes" create a truly authentic book, which makes for an enjoyable read and a crazy ride into a hyperbole of our time.

One of the best writers of our time

Tom Robbins is a genius. I have read all of his novels. This is definetly one of my favorites. Still Life With Woodpecker explores everyones need for love. It defines how we see ourselves and each other. It dares to tell us, in an off the wall story line, how we love one another and always for the wrong reasons. The plot to this book is unpredictable to say it best, although Tom Robbins writes in a very unique way. You will either love his style or not be able to read twenty pages without remembering high school "literary works of art". I personally read this book in about 5 hours. I picked it up and the world ceased to exist. This is one of those books you can get lost in, and you begin to realize why you love to read, which to me is to escape the boring reality of the real world. In books people are who they are and do what they say. I also recommend Jitterbug Perfume, by Tom Robbins. This is my favorite out of all of them. If you are looking for an author similar to Robbins, the closest I have found is Richard Grant, I recommend Tex and Molly in the Afterlife. Enjoy Tom Robbins, you'll never quite read anything like him ever again.

A quirky modern-day love story with fairytale twist(edness)

I was reading this book while working as a file clerk in a large corporate company and I loved the book so much, that I would sneak into the back of the file room each day to read it. Needless to say, I missed out on 3 days of work! This book brings up the question "How do you make love stay," and Robbins offers up some enticing answers. My once brand-new paperback is now a mess of highlighted paragraphs and folded pages. "Woodpecker" is a brilliant, witty and thought-provoking novel that is impossible to put down once you pick it up. Do yourself a favor and read this book. If anything, you might gain some insight regarding life, love and the hidden meaning behind a pack of Camel cigarettes.
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