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Kink: A Novel
 
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Kink: A Novel [Hardcover]

Kathe Koja (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 1996
Koja's uncanny blend of eroticism and gothic hallucination, her unabashed readiness to take on the larger issues of the human condition, and her sheer lyricism as a prose stylist have set an ambitious standard by which other writers of her generation must be judged. Kink explores the many dazzling facets of obsession--intellectual, emotional, and sexual--created and refracted by the ever-changing dynamics of a three-way relationship between a man and two women. Author readings.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

With a blend of erotic and gothic sensibilities, Koja explores the facets of obsession in a three-way relationship between a man and two women set against the gritty downtown backdrop of late-night clubs and a decadent art scene. Gripping and sensuous, dark and edgy, Kink is a tantalizing read.

From Publishers Weekly

Characters consumed by their obsessions are a Koja (Strange Angels) trademark, but where they have served as appropriate vehicles for the psychological horrors of her earlier novels, they come across as self-absorbed bores in this stab at transgressive mainstream fiction. Jess, who narrates, and Sophie are young lovers, synchronized in mood and smugly confident of their superiority to the avant-garde artiste types they hang out with-until they let the sexually alluring Lena move into their apartment. Lena becomes part of their "kink," a way of "making your life, shaping it like, like art, by the way you see things, the way you are." The ensuing menage a trois proves short-lived, however, as Jess and Sophie find themselves battling for Lena's affection. Jess spends much of his time wallowing in self-pity and blinded to what will be obvious to readers: that the aloof Lena is working out her own kink, using the unperceptive couple as pawns. Koja is a brilliant stylist; the unembellished sensory impressions she shapes into the matrix of Jess's narrative perfectly express his emotional devastation. Jess will win the sympathy of few readers, however, as his ceaseless examination of his hurt feelings casts his story in the same light in which he ultimately views Lena: as an entity "without passion or defiance, no heat at all, but only cold, enormous and self-contained." Rights (other than electronic): Scovil Chichak Galen.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 278 pages
  • Publisher: Henry Holt & Co; 1st edition (June 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0805043918
  • ISBN-13: 978-0805043914
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #592,017 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating,original and delivered with punch!, November 26, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Kink: A Novel (Hardcover)
This book is one of the most interesting I've ever read. It is somewhat satirical and looks at the frailties of human relationships.Jess, the narrator is an ordinary guy in a very unusual situation. He's in love with two women and must struggle both with his own psyche and selfish drives and the manipulitiveness of both women. This is a book about selfishness and it's consequences. It's not so much a plot-based book as a fascinating study of human relationships. Both dark and humorous at times and always intelligent and insightful. In summary, I loved it. Highly reccomended,
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and entertaining, though slightly flawed, January 28, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Kink: A Novel (Hardcover)
Kathe Koja ranges across a variety of styles and genres. Although a writer of rare ability, she seems, at times, to be more interested in word play than in telling a story. This is not always a bad thing, but it has to be handled delicately. It is far too easy to lose your readers as they wend their way through the author's maze of words and phrases. So it is with "Kink", Ms. Koja's latest novel. At its heart, the novel is about the love triangle between two women and one man. Told through the eyes of the man, it explores his disintegration and subsequent redemption. This emotional fall and rise mirrors the menage a trois' evolution and destruction. It is at once sad and poignant. However, Ms. Koja's use of language continually disrupts the reader. The author has chosen to relate the story in a stream of consciousness style that requires the reader to follow the often turbulent thought processes of the narrator, Jess. Not only does this style grow tiresome, it deprives the reader of relating to the other main characters. Viewed as they are through the prism of Jess' perceptions, they come across as flat and one-dimensional. Sophie, Jess' lover at the beginning of the book, suffers the most from this. The reader never understands her motivations. Jess' inability to communicate with Sophie effectively shuts out the reader as well. As a consequence, a character that could have added needed depth and complexity remains largely tangential, although she is integral to much of the plot. Ms. Koja is a fine author who is certain to gain a wider audience. One only hopes her next novel improves on the promise she shows us in "Kink"
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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Koja delivers. again., April 13, 2004
This review is from: Kink: A Novel (Hardcover)
Kathe Koja, Kink (Henry Holt, 1996)

Kathe Koja's fifth novel, and her last (to date) book for adults, came and went in the blink of an eye. Published by a relatively obscure publisher (Henry Holt normally does textbooks and obscure "literary" fiction) rather than her native Dell, given next to no publicity, and allowed to languish, Kink fell into obscurity within a few months of its publication date. I first ran across word Koja had published a fifth novel two months after its release; when I tried to order a copy, Borders was unable to get it. It had already gone out of print. It has never, to my knowledge, been released in paperback.

To call this an abomination, a crime against nature, would perhaps be understating the case. Koja is one of a handful of writers who regularly compete for the title of America's finest living person of letters. Kink, coming after the two perfect novels Skin and Strange Angels, could only be a letdown, right? If it went out of print THAT fast?

Of course not, fool.

Kink is, as any fan of Koja's is probably happy to hear, a work of brilliance just as blinding and extreme as Strange Angels (or Straydog, the book that came afterwards, with six long years between the two). It is not, like her previous novels, horror. Unlike the others, it doesn't even pretend to be. Kink is human drama, pure and simple. The mysterious, ethereal characters who have peppered her work from the beginning of here career are here exposed as pathetic, degenerates for the sake of degeneracy, living in their own little worlds carved out of the fabric of reality, existing only to hover around Koja's main characters like moths drawn to a bug zapper.

In this case, the main characters are three: Jess and Sophie, the young couple in love, meet Lena, the alluring loner. Through a string of events that seem random to Jess, who narrates, Lena ends up moving in, and well, the inevitable occurs.

Three-way relationships, be they [adult relations] or platonic, are the most fragile of delicacies. The ability to manipulate the balance of power within one to one's own ends, whatever they may be, are endless. Ultimately, that's what Kink is about; the rest of the world (including the novel's readership) is clearly capable of seeing this from the get-go, while Jess is too thick-headed to get it. (The comments of many of the book's reviewers make me think that, while they get that Jess is too thickheaded to see what's going on, don't buy how easy it is to manipulate others in such a situation. Trust me. The realism here goes well above and beyond that to be found in Skin or Strange Angels.) Jess' inability to see what's going on around him is relatively understandable, as he's blinded by both his love for Sophie and his passion for Lena; he does make some hall-of-fame-worthy stupid moves at various times, which to be fair have to be rationalized away. Eventually, the book does move out of the world of the [physical relations] dynamic and back into the world of the pathetic losers I talked about at the start, a world Jess is now very familiar with, and the book sets up a mystery about one of Lena's old flames (with a sucker punch at the end that caps the book off perfectly) that continues the interest far beyond anything reasonable.

Kink is a novel about obsession. I get the feeling that the more of an obsessive personality you are as a reader, the more you'll get out of it. I can say with almost certainty that if you've been in a three-way relationship that went horribly, fatal-car-accident-scale wrong and stayed that way for a period of time, you're going to end up revering this book. Koja fans who have been hunting it down since its release will also not be disappointed. The rest of the world, well, recent research has led me to believe they just won't get it.

Kink is not as good as Strange Angels, but in the same way Skin is not as good as Strange Angels; the three of them (along with Straydog, but it being part of the "new phase" of Koja's work I probably shouldn't count it) form a triumvirate that could stand as a how-to guide for writers of fiction who want to deal in well-drawn characters, dark plots, and existential decay. Strange Angels, as I have often said, is one of the three or four best novels in the English language; "not as good" means Skin and Kink fall somewhere in the top, say, twenty-five. Whatever possessed Henry Holt to publish this I have no idea, but I just went back over my last five years of reading, and whatever it is, I hope it stays at Holt. It is by far the finest novel they ever produced that came across my desk. *****

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