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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BRILLIANT AND ORIGINAL
James Dyer was born without the ability to feel either pain or emotion. As such, he lacks empathy, the epitome of all human qualities. What happens when James undergoes a radical transformation forms the central questions this novel poses--Is it pain that defines our humanity and lies at its heart? Does a surfeit of pain destroy humanity as effectively as does its...
Published on March 5, 2000

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Neither as bad as some would paint it, nor...
Particularly since it won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award in 1999, this novel seems to have polarised reviewers. Some have been caustic about it's supposed deficiencies, while others have heaped praise upon this debut novel of Andrew Miller. Certainly it is an ingenious idea for a story. A boy, the consequence of an illicit liason, grows having no...
Published on June 14, 2000 by Wayne Symes


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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BRILLIANT AND ORIGINAL, March 5, 2000
By A Customer
James Dyer was born without the ability to feel either pain or emotion. As such, he lacks empathy, the epitome of all human qualities. What happens when James undergoes a radical transformation forms the central questions this novel poses--Is it pain that defines our humanity and lies at its heart? Does a surfeit of pain destroy humanity as effectively as does its absence? How do we achieve the necessary balance between empathy and self-destruction? Ingenious Pain encompasses a brilliantly original premise, almost faultlessly executed. Andrew Miller has created complex and believable characters of tremendous emotional depth in a setting true to its times. His extraordinary use of language paints a word picture that reaches both the depths of despair and the heights of hope, ending on a note of both tragedy and joy. The juxtaposition of the unfeeling Dyer against images of astounding richness creates metaphors of striking beauty and pain. The book's only fault lies in its lengthy backstory. Miller spends far too much time detailing Dyer's childhood, time that could have been better and more interestingly spent detailing Dyer, the man. (The sections with Gummer and Mr. Canning, in particular, seemed to serve no useful purpose and did nothing to enrich the book.) Although slightly less than perfect, Ingenious Pain is still astounding in its brilliance; a novel whose theme and symbolism will haunt you with questions for years to come.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars _Ingenious Pain_ is a complex pleasure, April 24, 2000
This review is from: Ingenious Pain (Hardcover)
I don't remember ever reading a first novel that captured my attention so completely while simultaneously challenging all of my standard expectations for fiction. Almost everything about this book was a pleasant surprise. Set in the Eighteenth Century, this somewhat picaresque tale follows the life of James Dyer, a man born without the ability to feel pain, from conception until his death. The book actually begins with Dyer's autopsy, a scene that is puzzling (since there is no exposition) and brutally ugly. I was tempted to put the book down, since for the first thirty or so pages scenes and characters appear with no context and I had very little idea of what anything meant. That would have been a mistake. As soon as the author leaps back to the day of Dyer's conception and the story begins to move forward I was hooked. Because James cannot feel pain he never develops empathy with others and grows to be a remarkably capable surgeon but a very cold man. The story of his awakening as a real human being, which occupies the last quarter of the novel, is very moving without the least traces of sentimentality.

The cast of characters that Andrew Miller has invented as supporting players are all interesting and complex. The stages of Dyer's life, from a childhood on a farm (where he was thought to be an idiot since he didn't speak), through a stint as a medicine show freak, then as a 'specimen' of human oddities by a wealthy collector of such, to a life at sea, the building of a successful practice as a surgeon, affairs, duels, flight, a dangerous journey to St. Petersburg and then the collapse of his sanity and his health resulting in a stint in London's notorious Bedlam hospital, are all told in a style that while borrowing from some conventions of eighteenth century writing never try to ape it. I loved the sound of Miller's words and the shape of the sentences. This is a book I could have enjoyed reading aloud.

This is a complex book on many levels, but not an inaccessable one. The story - once into it - is clear and the characters are cleanly drawn. There are enough ups and downs of fortune to keep even the most jaded fiction fan interested while at the same time the complexity of character, language and theme provide much for those who love to puzzle out the hidden meanings in literature.

This was a fascinating book and I was sorry to see it end. I really recommend it to anyone who wants something that can challenge the mind while satisfying all reader's love of a good story.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Unusual, interesting, intelligent, deeply human, September 1, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Ingenious Pain (Hardcover)
Miller writes about that element which perhaps makes us all too human...pain: not just the physical sort, but also mental and emotional. This man... this "freak" character who knows no pain at all seems so bold ...and inhuman. But the moment he loses this characteristic is moving and remains in my mind...
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Creatively daring, totally unconventional, and successful!, July 11, 2000
What a thrill to read a novel by a first time author so skilled and so committed to his subject that he can reject all the conventions and still get his surprising book published--receiving rave reviews on two continents in the process!

Miller sets the book in the eighteenth century and begins with a graphic autopsy of the main character. Here he recreates the philosophical and scientific attitudes of the period, attitudes which are alien to our own, and which he will explore as a subtext throughout the book. He summarizes the life of the main character--which he spends the rest of the book recounting--in the first chapter, eliminating any climactic excitement he might have created. His main character is a man with the inability to feel pain, someone with whom the reader cannot possibly identify, and his adventures are weirdly melodramatic, so unusual the reader's interest lies primarily in their curiosity.

Yet the book "works," and very often thrills. Somehow he does manage to make the reader care about James Dyer and his fate, and he does create excitement in a plot which skips from small town England to the court of Russia. Miller's masterful and controlled use of description is a primary factor in his ability to further the action of this unusual story and bring the characters and the period alive. This reader was awestruck by Miller's creative daring--and by his success. Mary Whipple
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful and moving., March 29, 1999
This review is from: Ingenious Pain (Hardcover)
This is a first novel? Fantastic! The language is so rich with sensory imagery, and the rhythms of its structure so musical that it borders on poetry.

The story, too, is poetic, and one to pierce to the heart. James Dyer is born without the ability to sense pain or pleasure. As such, he is not truly human. He knows no sympathy or empathy, and therefore no love, no joy, no sadness; how could he?

When he is finally "fixed", and, as an adult, is basically re-born to natural pain and pleasure, all the accumulated experiences of his flesh, throughout his life, are still to be felt. And it drives him temporarily mad. And yet, in his agony, he still knows that he has been saved from an incomplete existence.

This is a complex and beautiful book, that illuminates the richness of ordinary human life, through its discovery by an extraordinary man.

Not for intellectual or emotional lightweights.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pent Up Pain Destroys and Rebuilds, August 23, 2000
By 
J. Hardy IV (Snohomish, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Precise, cold, and cutting. Reflecting the lead character Dr. James Dyer, the author succeeds admirably in impressing upon the reader the lack of passion, empathy, or human feeling in this story. That is not a condemnation; to the contrary, by the time the novel has finished, Dyer has gone through a transformation to a more sympathetic character, producing a strong emotional response. This novel continues the favorable trend I've seen with English authors, including Rupert Thompson and Patrick McGrath. I find something about their writing styles fascinating and alluring, so crisp, cool, and ultimately detached. The novel takes place in the early 1700's. James Dyer, bastard son, is born without the ability to feel physical pain. As one might imagine, this opens the doors to some interesting careers, including con artist sidekick [magic elixir cures all pain, buy now], and high society medical curiosity. Eventually though, Dyer, who incidentally is as uncaring and emotionally aloof as he is impervious to injury, decides to become a physician. Slicing and dicing with gusto and a stilted bedside manner, he creates quite a name for himself, including a stint in the British navy. A sprint to the far reaches of Russia is necessary for James to begin his descent to the world of pain for his hubris. Contributing to this descent are his erstwhile travel partners and a mysterious, almost otherworldly presence in the character of Mary. Dyer's eventual indoctrination to the world of pain he has skirted for so long is shattering. The remainder of the novel deals with slow, painful metamorphosis. Upon completion I like to reflect on the emotion(s) produced by a novel. With Ingenious Pain, it is pity and sympathy. A very good read, and recommended.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dr Dyer, the ultimate 18th century hero., May 31, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Ingenious Pain (Hardcover)
This book has a curious idea, which is treated surprisingly well. It seems to me Miller really knew what he wanted to write about and also possesses the necessary talent. Unlike some other readers, I didn't feel that James Dyer's lack of feelings made him a despisable or repulsive character. I was quite impressed by the way Miller describes his silent self-assurity. I think this novel can be read in many ways. Maybe it tells about how the cruel world can break even the strongest of souls. Dyer didn't die a happy man. He was beaten and destroyed, a shadow of his former self. This is a sad but beautiful book.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Poetic historical meditation on what it is to be human, April 14, 1999
James Dyer, Andrew Miller's main character in Ingenious Pain is still with me. For a character who has no emotion to begin with, that's kind of odd.

When I first read taht James Dyer had no emotion, I expected --silly me-- a character who was fairly flat. But Andrew Miller proves to me that a character without emotion with only intellectual brilliance but no emotional intelligence would naturally fall into pride and arrogance. His character, James Dyer, is uncaring, arrogant and belittling of other people's pain. When he becomes a famous ultra reputable doctor, he only cares about money.

And when he becomes mad because he finally understands those emotions he has always belittled: love, fear, sorrow, it is perfectly understandable.

I liked the ending, too. He's finally redeemed. It's not ultra dramatic like those plot-driven American Blockbuster movies, but it rings true.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing Speculation, July 12, 2000
This review is from: Ingenious Pain (Hardcover)
The main character of this book, James Dyer, was fascinating to me. I keep wondering if the author has known an individual like Dyer in his contemporary life. Dyer's abilities of not feeling pain and healing quickly take him through an early life of survival and success as a canny surgeon.

Dyer suffered an abrupt change and came to meet all his pains, and indeed suffered them all at once. The thing that I did not understand is why this happened to him. The life event which was supposed to have precipitated the change is unconvincing. There was a reference to the supernatural in this change but I had trouble telling if the supernatural element helped him into his feeling state or helped him cope with the problems of his feeling state.

I really thought the setting of the 1700s was well described. The author neither glorified nor villified the age. The description of life in a mental instutition of the time was very interesting. Did the author do research on this topic or did he make up this information? If there was research, it would be nice to see the sources. In any case, he presented a very believable situation.

This is a book that can be discussed, because questions are raised that are not easily answered.

My favorite quote refers to love:

"It is like the rain, brother. You cannot always be out of it."

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An exquisitely original mystery, February 21, 1999
By A Customer
Andrew Miller has created a fascinating, mysterious world in which science and magic blend exquisitely. We know the ending from the first page, and yet we are as transfixed by the strange, icy Dr. James Dyer - and the wreck that he becomes - just like his 18th-century contemporaries. Miller has done extensive research, and the novel is also a wonderful look at the science and medicine of Dr. Dyer's time, of the role of freaks and lunatics, and of life both in the upper echelons and on the fringes of British society. I was enthralled.
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Ingenious Pain
Ingenious Pain by Andrew Miller (Hardcover - April 1, 1997)
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