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Paperback The Impossibly Book

ISBN: 1566892813

ISBN13: 9781566892810

The Impossibly

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

"Innovative, comic, bizarre and beautiful, The Impossibly reads as if Donald Barthelme were channeling Alain Robbe-Grillet, Samuel Beckett, Ben Marcus and reruns of Get Smart."--Time Out New York

When the anonymous narrator botches an assignment from the clandestine organization that employs him, everyone in his life becomes a participant in his punishment. In the end, he is called out of retirement for a final...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Wit and heart

Hunt's narrator is a confused overweight dude who works for a criminal organization. He's always being given mysterious tasks by mysterious, violent people in mirrored sunglasses (the mirrors are a tip-off that these folks might at times be products of the narrator's mind -- perhaps, even, at some points, his mind after he's dead). Hunt's prose is smooth, witty, deadpan, but it's ruptured frequently by sudden flashbacks that are left purposefully unsignposted, so the texture of the writing remains even and glassy whle the timeframe it's describing wanders around wildly. I occasionally had to look back a few pages to remind myself where and how a particular tangent had begun, and I like having to do this when I read: it means I'm having to pay attention. Hunt may be using this device to describe the way we experience the world: our experience seems continuous, but it's made up of jarring swerves into memory and dream and, ultimately, death. There's a love story amidst all this that I found quite moving. (In fact, I found the narrator's predicament moving throughout, despite its goofiness). The narrator's girlfriend is always wanting to acquire objects for which she does not know names. He provides the names, when he can: the objects she wants are usually oddly familiar things, like staplers. He finds all this charming, which makes sense, because he's trying to make sense out of the way his own perceptual reality is constructed. The girlfriend acquires what she learns names for, which is, again, a metaphor for the way we experience the world: we have access to that which we can name. In that way, in a familiar poststucturalist sense, our worlds are constructed out of language, and what we can "acquire" is limited by what we can talk about. Such a worldview does incite a kind of paranoia, though: what are we not seeing, what are we not getting at, if we can't describe it well enough to get hold of it and put it on a little shelf in our minds? And who controls what we see and know if we can get at reality only through language? In Hunt's novel, what the narrator sees and knows seems to be controlled by the criminal organization he works for, but there's a sense that escape is available and should be attempted even at great cost (Hunt's narrator, who does attempt to escape from the social controls he usually operates inside, is seriously punished for his temporary exit). Hunt has found a new way to represent a strange aspect of human experience: that we don't know and can't know how much of what we perceive is reality, conspiracy, our invention, etc. -- it's an old phenomenological problem, even a Romantic problem (Shelley's " human mind...[that] passively renders and receives," and Wordsworth's concern with the world as "what we half create, and what perceive.") Hunt's book brings up all sorts of philosophical issues I haven't touched on and probably lots I know nothing about; it's also zany fun. I haven't read a new American novel I've liked as muc

demanding yet entertaining

I picked up The Impossibly after a review in Time Out New York called it a combination of Robbe-Grillet and Beckett, two of my favorite authors. I can see where the comparison came from, but I don't think it's very accurate. If anything, the novel reads like Kafka as if written by Donald Barthelme - obscure and frustrating, yet written in a breezy ironic style. The review from Publishers Weekly complains that "the absence of plot make[s] this a difficult, frustrating read," but the same criticism could also be lobbed at any of the other authors above, and it misses the point - The Impossibly is not supposed to be a Bildungsroman, its difficulties are intentional. And it's worth the effort - the book is intelligent, funny, and beautifully written.

Impossibly Grand

The Impossibly is the best book that I have read this year: in fact, it is the best book that I've read since enjoying Georges Perec, Harry Mathews, Melville, David Markson, Proust, Kafka, or Paul Auster. What is wonderful about The Impossibly is that there are no other books like it: a rare claim in a world of increasingly formulaic and patronising novels. It is a book which is both extremely erudite and extremely simple: the mysterious plot, the author's witty asides, existential bewilderment, intellectual playfulness, and obvious mastery of the art of writing combine to make a work which is a joy from start to finish. The Impossibly achieves the impossible: a completely thrilling fusion of accessible popular fiction and challenging, stimulating art.

Dry, deadpan prose characterizes this fascinating mystery

The Impossibly is a stunning debut novel by Laird Hunt that is dark, contradictory, and utterly compelling. When The Impossibly's anonymous narrator bungles an assignment for his shadowy employers, everyone and everything in his life turns around to double cross him or stand by him. The narrator must navigate an unnamed European city, unraveling the mystery and enlisting the reader as a detective in order to identify the assassins that seek to exterminate him. Dry, deadpan prose characterizes this fascinating, original mystery.

Love, Crime and Chaos

This is one of the most extraordinary books I've had the perplexing pleasure of reading in a long time. Love, crime, chaos and deep confusion are all dealt with by a narrator who comes across as a fusion of Don Quixote, Sancho Panza and The Continental Op. A reviewer in the St Petersburg Times rated this among the funniest and strangest books she had ever read -- I would have to agree with that. What could be next? Keep your eyes peeled on this guy, he's the real thing. Whatever that thing is.
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