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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Dark New Journey for Fry,
By
This review is from: Revenge: A Novel (Hardcover)
Ned Maddstone has it all, or at least enough to make him feel reasonably confident about his prospects: a wealthy father in the government, a fifth-generation place waiting for him at Oxford, and a girlfriend who considers herself "the luckiest, happiest, most dementedly in-love girl in the world" because of him. He's also Head Boy at his English prep school, a position likely to make an enemy or two, whether today or in 1980 when the book opens. After Ned commits a small, but not easily forgiven offense against a classmate, a simple prank to defame him coincides with a much greater secret service operation and he ends up locked in a psychiatric hospital for the better part of two decades.Bereft of human contact for much of that time, except for that of his captors, Ned forgets who he is until he strikes up an unlikely friendship with a fellow patient named Babe. A crusty old buggar is Babe, and he effectively pulls Ned back from the brink of madness (but not quite all the way--that's where the "Revenge" part comes in). From Babe and the limited hospital library Ned receives a more intensive education than he was ever likely to get at Oxford--ask yourself how you'd spend all those years--becoming a master chess player and attaining fluency in over a half-dozen languages along the way while he prepares for life after his harrowing escape. Fry's is an intellect which far surpasses that of most of his critics and, we must admit, many of his admirers as well. This book is an attempt at something much darker and less outrageous than his previous work. In so doing he mutes his narrative persona far more than in any of his previous work, which was at first slightly disappointing to me as a loyal fan. He succeeds, however in creating a genuine page-turner, even if it's not quite the thriller with a capital "t" one might have thought was coming. Still, this is a worthwile book and evidence that Fry has lost nothing of his customary depth and cleverness. If you are new to Fry I wholeheartedly recommend "The Liar" and "The Hippopotamus" which may have you laughing out loud for days if you like your English humor both erudite and locker-room. There is still no living writer I'd rather invite to a dinner party more than Stephen Fry. Cheers!
18 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Stephen Fry is One of a Dying Kind,
By
This review is from: Revenge: A Novel (Hardcover)
I have no idea what the previous reviewers were thinking, but it certainly had nothing to do with the book, Revenge--or as it was entitled in the original, Stars' Tennis Balls.Fry has never hidden the fact that this is the Count Monte Cristo story, and neither was he going to amend Dumas' storyline by much. It was simply reworked in a, well, very Stephen Fry-esque way. In order to understand it, you need to have known Stephen Fry and his work (including that in acting) for some time. He truly is a representative of a near-extinct type, the well-rounded man. Revenge/Stars' Tennis Balls has a wealth of autobiographical elements by this rather troubled man, but he never loses his sense of humour about it, nor does it become annoying. It is a virtuoso's play with language that also serves as an entertaining read. I finished this book in one night and recommend Fry's other works (Hippopotamus, Moab Is My Washpot, Making History, Liar, Paperweight), including his wonderful acting in the famous BBC series, Blackadder. To appreciate them, though, you need to be a bit of a Britophile.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A comedian writes a bloody thriller & lives to tell the tale,
By
This review is from: Revenge: A Novel (Hardcover)
The first fifty-or-so pages of this novel are witty, and comic, as those familiar with Frye's previous work will expect. Then, the hero Ned Maddstone is betrayed (a la the Count of Monte Cristo), spends 20 years unjustly locked in a mental institution, and returns to seek his revenge. I've noticed that previous reviewers who liked the Flippant Frye were disturbed by the Spooky, Scary Frye who replaces him in mid-book.Let me give you another perspective: I think this was a change for the better. The young, flippant, self-centered, class-bound comic characters of the introduction made my poor Midwestern soul want to slap them silly. I can only take so much petulance. Over the course of the book, through the darker events, the charcters manage to grow and change. They are no longer twits. In their place, there is sharp writing, deft plotting (it may be Dumas' plotting, but it is still deft), and much excitement. In short, this book managed to surprise me even though I knew the plot outline in advance--and how often can you say that anymore? A final caveat - the violence is quite graphic, even sadistic (although believable in its way). Stay away if you don't like that sort of thing, and pray that Mr. Frye has a really good therapist.
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