Robert Kingett ha recensito Black Buck di Mateo Askaripour
The first half is better
3 stelle
The satire I've read and enjoyed centered around one particular theme throughout the whole book. The first half of this book, I'd say, chapters 1 through 19, do this very well. It is a great commentary about a smart Black man losing his way while trying to work in white America.
The second half of the book was not so gripping, partly because it seemed as though the absurdity didn't have a central theme that carried the wacky jokes. It's as if the book wanted to become 2 books in one. Perhaps it was trying to show that, for Black lives, nothing is as it seems, but I feel this could have been conveyed while sticking to a centered plot.
The jokes poke fun at how whites view Black lives, but the second half of the book didn't hold my interest nearly as strongly as the first half of this …
The satire I've read and enjoyed centered around one particular theme throughout the whole book. The first half of this book, I'd say, chapters 1 through 19, do this very well. It is a great commentary about a smart Black man losing his way while trying to work in white America.
The second half of the book was not so gripping, partly because it seemed as though the absurdity didn't have a central theme that carried the wacky jokes. It's as if the book wanted to become 2 books in one. Perhaps it was trying to show that, for Black lives, nothing is as it seems, but I feel this could have been conveyed while sticking to a centered plot.
The jokes poke fun at how whites view Black lives, but the second half of the book didn't hold my interest nearly as strongly as the first half of this book. Maybe the careening plot switches are intentional. After all, it is a satire, and a darkly funny one at that.
I just happen to think one steady but powerful message is better than trying to cram lessons on every single page. In one chapter, we deal with Black people in prison, feminism, drug abuse for Black men, police brutality, casual and overt racism, and we don't examine what the book was initially presenting to us. It's as if the reason for this creation fell off the tracks completely.
I enjoyed this book but I am afraid I will not be reading this again. This author, though, is one of my favorite new satire writers. I can't wait to see the next book from the author.