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Raw Shark Texts [Audiobook] [Audio CD]

Steven Hall (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (120 customer reviews)


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Audio, CD, Audiobook, October 4, 2007 --  

Book Description

October 4, 2007
Eric Sanderson wakes up in a place he doesn't recognise, unable to remember who he is. Attacked by a force he cannot see and confronted with memories he cannot ignore, Eric discovers he is being hunted by a psychic predator, a shark. This creature may exist only in his mind, but it soon starts making some very real appearances in his world. Loaded with letters from his past self, each signed 'With regret and also hope, The First Eric Sanderson', Eric embarks on a quest to recover his life.A love story. An adventure. A psychological drama - This wild, touching, modern tale is cut through with an understated humour and warmth. The depths of love, language, memory and the inevitability of loss have never been plumbed with such deep-hearted imagination.It isn't all coming back to me. I don't know any of this at all. I felt that pricking horror, the one that comes when you realise the extent of something bad - if you're dangerously lost or you've made some terrible mistake - the reality of the situation creeping in through the back of your head like some pantomime Dracula. I did not know who I was. I did not know where I was.That simple.That frightening.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Amazon Best of the Month, March 2007: Not since Fight Club have a I read a book that sizzled with such fierce originality and searing vision as Steven Hall's electrifying debut novel, The Raw Shark Texts. It's a twisting, trippy thriller that tears through the landscape of language, revealing the lurking terrors uncovered in every letter of the written word. Steven Hall swims in the same surreal waters as pop-culture pioneers David Lynch and Michel Gondry, and The Raw Shark Texts deserves to be shelved somewhere between Trainspotting and Life of Pi. It pulls you under like a riptide, leaving you exhausted, exhilarated, and gasping for air.

But don't just take our word for it. We asked Audrey Niffenegger, one of the most creative contemporary writers working today, to share with readers her take on Steven Hall's debut novel, The Raw Shark Texts. Check out her exclusive Amazon guest review below. --Brad Thomas Parsons


Guest Reviewer: Audrey Niffenegger

Audrey Niffenegger is a professor in the Interdisciplinary Books Arts MFA Program at the Columbia College Chicago Center for Book and Paper Arts. A visual artist, she shows her artwork at Printworks Gallery in Chicago. The Time Traveler's Wife, her first novel, was an international bestseller and was one of Amazon.com's Best Books of 2003. It won several awards and is being made into a major motion picture. Her visual novels, The Three Incestuous Sisters and The Adventuress, were recently published by Harry N. Abrams. Miss Niffenegger is currently hard at work on her second novel, Her Fearful Symmetry, a ghost story set in London's Highgate Cemetery.

Eric Sanderson has lost his memory, his girl, his life as he once knew it. His pre-amnesiac self is sending him letters, a sort of correspondence course on how to be Eric Sanderson. Unfortunately, this previous self didn't really have it all together either. This is too bad, because the source of all the trouble is a conceptual shark, a Ludovician shark, no less. Soon Eric is on the run, trying to piece it all together and find true love before his mind gets wiped by the shark for the twelfth and probably final time.

Steven Hall is an inventive, funny and extremely smart writer. I am a letterpress printer and a typophile, and I was drawn to his book because of the typography: The Raw Shark Texts is riddled with typographic games, codes, a flip book, and a boatload of very elegant plot devices that hinge on collisions between the Information Age and the imagination. At one point Eric and Scout, his guide/love interest, are speeding away from the conceptual shark on a motorbike. Scout eludes the shark by exploding a letter bomb, a bomb made out of old metal type; the type diverts the shark into a stream of random letterforms. At this I practically fell off the couch with admiration.

There's plenty to groove on in The Raw Sharks Texts even if you're not a type maven. There's echoes of Cyberpunk, Borges, Auster; there is adventure on the high seas, lost love, an exploration of what it means to be human in the age of intelligent machines. The Raw Sharks Texts is huge fun, and I gleefully recommend it. --Audrey Niffenegger



--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Hall's debut, the darling of last year's London Book Fair, is a cerebral page-turner that pits corporeal man against metaphysical sharks that devour memory and essence, not flesh and blood. When Eric Sanderson wakes from a lengthy unconsciousness, he has no memory. A letter from "The First Eric Sanderson" directs him to psychologist Dr. Randle, who tells Eric he is afflicted with a "dissociative condition." Eric learns about his former life—specifically a glorious romance with girlfriend Clio Aames, who drowned three years earlier—and is soon on the run from the Ludovician, a "species of purely conceptual fish" that "feeds on human memories and the intrinsic sense of self." Once he hooks up with Scout, a young woman on the run from her own metaphysical predator, the two trek through a subterranean labyrinth made of telephone directories (masses of words offer protection, as do Dictaphone recordings), decode encrypted communications and encounter a series of strange characters on the way to the big-bang showdown with the beast. Though Hall's prose is flabby and the plethora of text-based sight gags don't always work (a 50-page flipbook of a swimming shark, for instance), the end result is a fast-moving cyberpunk mashup of Jaws, Memento and sappy romance that's destined for the big screen.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Canongate Books Ltd (October 4, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 184767156X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1847671561
  • Product Dimensions: 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (120 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,079,822 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

120 Reviews
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 (49)
4 star:
 (25)
3 star:
 (21)
2 star:
 (17)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (120 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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33 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Odd, different, and enjoyable, March 17, 2007
Lots of it's good, so let's start with that part. It gets off to an ordinary start - the protagonist has amnesia, so it could be about anything or nothing. It happened just after the death of a wonderful young woman who had taken him into his life. Then peculiarities emerge. This isn't usual amnesia, it recurs. He has these attacks.

He is attacked, it turns out. Something, equal parts philosophical abstraction and carnivore, has chosen Eric Sanderson as prey. With this revelation, we're down the rabbit hole and into a rubbery fantasy world. It's a world like none you've ever seen before, where information turns solid and solid objects are subject to debate. Characters develop reasonably well, with the exception of Mycroft Ward. The writing gets a bit overheated at times and the concept has soft spots, but both progress toward a satisfying end, one that has elements of "Griffin & Sabine" and Gaiman's "Neverwhere," but is wholly its own creature.

There's enough here to keep a reader moving along. If your imaginative "inner voice" moves its lips when it reads, there can be a lot to enjoy. I found a few points grating, though, and a tighter story would have been a better one. It's good, though. Some readers will get a lot from this one.

//wiredweird, reviewing a complimentary copy
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16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Literary Floundering: Adrift in Deep Water with the Great White Non-Shark, May 13, 2007
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I got through the first 50 pages or so of this wannabe innovative novel not sure what I was on to, but the writing was good enough, the unfolding plot odd and exciting enough to spur me on. Midway along, I started to really like the story -- and then, a hundred pages further , I was not so sure any more. Quickly the read became a downhill slide. Although beautifully written and highly, intriguingly imagined, the book's qualities fail to disguise a fairly hackneyed plot: amnesiac victim of some unknown trauma must discover his past and present reality. But then, what IS reality? Pursued by a conceptual, man/mind-eating shark, our hero sets literal (or not literal?)sail to solve that always too-grand question.

Does he resolve his existential dilemmas? (Yes, there are several such dilemmas, which means there's at least one too many.) By the end, I didn't much care. I finished the book out of duty, hoping to the last the story would redeem itself. Alas not.

Hitchcock did it much, much better.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Something New, Something Different, March 20, 2007
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Well, what can I say...this book was a good read.

I read it over the course of a single day, and I was not disappointed with the time I spent. The book begins with a simple, perhaps overused premise: the protagonist has lost his memory. He starts to rebuild a life for himself when he discovers that his memory loss was caused by something a little more sinister than a mere mental lapse.

Through a fascinating adventure into the depths of imagination and powerful verbal imagery the author takes you deep into the mind and thoughts of Eric Sanderson. He starts as a fairly cardboard, bland character, but then through constant growth he develops into his own sort of hero.

Though there are few characters in this book, the ones that are introduced feel alive and vibrant, especially the main female character, Scout. She is strong and independent, and is almost the picture-perfect strong female lead. Mr. Nobody is justifiably creepy, and the main antagonist, though never met, hovers over the events in the book with a dark, almost omnipotent malevolence.

I found very few things wrong with this book. The story is excellent, and I loved the characters. The ending almost seemed too happy for me, though, and it seemed like Sanderson's obsession over finding his dead girlfriend was fulfilled, and too easily at that. Also, there was mention of a second cat, Gavin...to where did he scamper? He was mentioned on too many occasions, and just seemed like he was abandoned as a character. His counterpart Ian provided the ideal image of a loyal, yet obstinant, feline.

I would like to see more happen in this universe of Hall's, especially with his presentation of Un-Space and the idea of a lot more happening in this world than most people ever see, yet I would also like to see what more Steven Hall can produce from his rich field of imagination.

Definitely a good read, especially from a first-time novelist!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
I was unconscious. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hallstand table, conceptual fish, conceptual loop, plant plant plant plant plant, yellow jeep, flying deck, burr burr, desk fan, unusual fish
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mycroft Ward, Mark Richardson, Clio Aames, Trey Fidorous, The Light Bulb Fragment, Aunty Ruth, Ryan Mitchell, Willows Hotel, Un-Space Exploration Committee, North Star, The Aquarium Fragment, Michael Caine
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