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Read Mr. Spaceman (2000)

Mr. Spaceman (2000)

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Rating
3.23 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0802137822 (ISBN13: 9780802137821)
Language
English
Publisher
grove press

Mr. Spaceman (2000) - Plot & Excerpts

3 and 1/2 starsI don't generally get along with fables, so when I saw this work described as such on the inner flap that didn't bode well for me, though I also know inner flaps lie, so I hoped that would be true here. At first, it didn't seem like a fable at all (good) and then when it did, it was done in a humorous way as if it were mocking itself (very good!).From hearing this author speak several times, I also detected his writing philosophy within this novel, so then it read at times as meta-fiction (also very good). The concentration on words and their meanings (including chuckle-inducing uses by the spaceman of contemporary slogans), the importance of 'yearning' (the spaceman comes to believe this is the defining characteristic of humans and I know his creator also believes this), the mention of the place 'from where you dream' and the way the spaceman can become one with each of his 'visitors' (his characters) all point toward this.The one big issue I had was that the narration is a bit repetitive, even though I understand why it is. I wasn't sure how I felt about the book until the ending, which caused me to smile as I saw it coming. It 'made' the book for me, but to tell you why would be to spoil it. ROB is a brilliant, imaginative writer and the last couple of chapters confirm that.

A unique meditation on language, human connection & comunication, & yearning most of all, which Mr. Spaceman finds to be the defining characteristic of earthlings. It is a creative, witty, & wise book that increasingly draws you into biblical metaphors & cadences, but is really only setting you up for a different kind of ending: earthlings have both a tendency to reject the alien & a desire for a savior; the spaceman is neither--he just wants to participate in their yearning. This was the most FUN I've had with a book since the last Tom Robbins novel.

What do You think about Mr. Spaceman (2000)?

This novel felt more like a cobbling together of various character sketches that were languishing somewhere in Butler's desk/hard drive. Of course it was impeccably written, but the ultimate premise is so silly that it was hard for me to take seriously even some of the more weighty topics broached by the text, such as racism and genocide, as well as the futility of human existence. It was a fun read, but I don't know that I'd want to reread it, nor can I think of anyone in particular to whom I'd recommend it...
—Morgan

I had to give a presentation on Butler's writing during Morrow's "Innovative Fiction" class - the day Butler was visiting our class. This ended up being quite unfortunate; in preperation I read his two previous collections of short-stories, which I loved, but the book we were reading for the class, "Mr. Spaceman," was not only the worst novel we read durring the class, its one of the worst novels I've ever read. The plot is basically a sequil to one of his stories from "Tabloid Dreams," but what worked as 12 page fairy-tale died when stretched to a full novel. Cheesy, cloying, and utterly predictable, the subtle-as-a-sledge-hammer Christ imagery at the end pushed it over the top. And I had to figure out how to talk about it in front of a group of students without deeply offending the author. Awk-ward.
—Chris

...this book is making me laugh out loud! The Spaceman remnamed DESI by his wife, has to learn all he can about earthlings. He ends up marrying Edna Bradshaw who he calls, Edna Bradshaw, every time he refers to her, a hairdresser from Louisiana. I can see why the author starts the book out with humor. The 'meat' of the book is the life-changing events of the persons that have come to be on his space ship for this time. And where did they come from? A bus driving to a casino! The events that these people share with the spaceman are serious themes any debate team could use as topics. I think I will read this book again in the future and in the interum I am looking forward to reading his Pulizer Prize winning book.
—Linda

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