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10 Reviews
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Funny at first...,
By A Customer
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
Don't get me wrong, I found this book funny the whole way through, but by the time I had reached the end I was beginning to become aware of a handful of serious issues that Elton raises. For example, having a protagonist who is a c.p sufferer to demonstrate the way cars are beginning to disable us all; 'Gridlock is when a city dies'. He comments on various aspects of society, usually taking a small chapter away from the plot to do so. The film-like rapid change of scenes with the 'goodies' and the 'baddies' makes you wonder how long it'll be until someone buys the rights, yet at the same time, there is no way they could possibly show the deep analysis of humanity that Elton displays. This novel is a brilliant dip-in dip-out tale that can be read on two levels. The humour is perceptive and effective to the story. Please read it!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Short and not so satisfying.,
By
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
I thought that I'd really like this book because private car ownership is something I despise. I don't drive a car because I think that the world would be so much more pleasant if there simply weren't as many as there are and I'm not one to say 'if you cant beat em, join em'. But cars can't be beaten as Elton's character Geoffrey Spasmo finds out.Elton seems to be on my plain of thinking when he opens the book with a short story about the 'Brainian' aliens who study other planets as part of a TV show every week. They could understand every aspect of human activity except one "You're trying to tell me that they're all going in the same direction, travelling to much the same destinations yet deliberately impeding each others progress by occupying their own completely empty tin box?" Elton's Branian producer remarks in disbelief "you're drunk!" Although Elton's political theme was one I'm personally interested in, I think this book suffers from a lack of strong characters and entertaining 'social' subplots; it is almost totally devoted to the world of politics and business. Elton's political rants are agreeable (if you swing toward the left) and are written to tickle the funny bone but I think he finds greater humour in the social scenario. This is why I believe the humor didn't match up to Elton's usual standard, it lacked his hilarious remarks on social do's and dont's. If you're just starting on Ben Elton, I'd recommend his first novel 'Stark' which centres around environmental degradation. Stark was hilarious and keeps you guessing. Dead Famous is another good Elton novel investigating the sleazeball ethics behind exploiting people for reality TV. Gridlock wasn't bad but if I don't think it's Elton's best effort. I do think he's a great political satirist.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not Free SF Reader,
By Blue Tyson "- Research Finished" (Legion clubhouse) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
A dead city doesn't move.This book is certainly not in the class of Stark, unfortunately. Maybe due to the somewhat narrower focus, and some similarities to the previous effort. Again, industrial pollution is an element as a city that becomes full of cars as has no functional transport methods dies. Those doing well out of this of course want to keep the status quo and bump off people trying to do something about it.
5.0 out of 5 stars
JAMS BOND,
By DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Gridlock (Mass Market Paperback)
This novel is art imitating life to about the extent that a James Bond film does that. It's for Ben Elton's fans, of whom I happen to be one. It picks up the theme of degradation of our environment that he had attacked wholesale in his previous novel Stark, focuses this time on the specific threats from motor transport, and features once again heroic misfits battling with cartoon ogres and monsters in the shape of tycoons of the auto and oil industries. The style uses comic hyperbole in aid of a serious message, but not much of the book is actually about the ostensible theme, namely gridlock. Apart from the `off-planet introduction' there is nothing more about gridlock until right at the end. The rest is all about pollution from auto exhausts, and indeed if the ecologically-positive hydrogen engine in the story had actually gone into production its popularity, far from helping with traffic congestion and encouraging a switch to public transport, might have had exactly the opposite effect so far as I can see.Ben Elton is nothing if not inventive, and some of the more ingenious contraptions we find here would have been worthy of Ian Fleming's Q. This is one of his earlier efforts, before he slowed down a little in later novels. He is still taking pops at every incidental target he can think of, still chasing every hare he starts, but never losing his main thread even when he is throwing out more ideas per square minute (as he used to do in his standup comedy routine) than practically any other novelist I can think of. There are various subsidiary themes and sub-plots, but of course this is a novel with a message if ever there was one, clever certainly but roughly as subtle as an Abrams tank in the way the message is put across. Insofar as the theme really is gridlock, Ben Elton used an analogy in one of his comedy acts that has stuck with me since I heard it. To try to cope with gridlock on the roads by building more and more roads, said he, is like solving the problem of an overflowing kitchen bin by buying a second bin. What does this `solution' leave us with? You got it in one - TWO overflowing kitchen bins. He must surely have been relieved, as we all were, when a pleasant young presenter of a TV programme dedicated to cars recently had a miraculous escape from a crash when testing some strange vehicle at something like 250 mph. The whole project involved design ingenuity, great expense and of course an enormous output of pollutant gases. If the fortunate young man had the opportunity in hospital to do some reading and to reflect on what possible purpose his deathmobile can conceivably have been intended for I hope some wellwisher brought him a copy of Gridlock.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Clever and Funny,
By alistair w "AliWiseman" (Leiden Netherlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
Very well written, much like some of the old audio / stand up, Ben is cutting, sharp, emotive, and provocative. The plot is probably a bit too close to the truth for the oil barons of this world, and the political aspect may well be the same. At times i was laughing out loud, at others i sat and thought ponderously, a good mix from any book. Read and enjoy.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Funny and thoughtful,
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
It was a really clever book, and fun read. If you like the kind of book with laugh-out-loud humor and good commentary, you'll like this one.
3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gridlock is amazing,
By A Customer
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
This book is a true gem. Ben Elton can make me laugh. This book is exciting and enlightening, it gave me a whole new perspective on cars.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A piece of Art,
By A Customer
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
This book looks at serious matters regarding the car industry and it's greed. It shows how the car industry puts profits before costomers but with a humour behind it all. This book about a interlectual disabled man running from the big bosses of the car industy is a big winner.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Read it.,
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
With its sensitive handling of its two central characters (one a c.p. sufferer, the other a cripple), this book is a masterpiece. Very readable, packed with humour and yet still managing to deal with serious issues and make its main characters come across as genuine, sympathetic people.
1 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Elton at his worst,
By
This review is from: Gridlock (Paperback)
Gridlock is a poor cover for Ben Elton to expound his politically-correct views on the world again. It's a shame, because Elton has a fine sense of humor and the basic premise of the story's not that bad. Unfortunately, the whole sorry scenario is spoiled right from page one with Elton truisms.Why can't Elton stick to what he knows best - making people laugh? |
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Gridlock by Ben Elton (Hardcover - June 13, 1991)
Used & New from: $0.02
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