Einstein's Monsters by Martin Amis - ISBN: 9780099768913
Paperback
Nuclear nightmares reveal our monstrous potential in darkly comic tales.

Einstein's Monsters

$21.79

  • Paperback

    128 pages

  • Release Date

    2 July 1999

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Summary

In five cataclysmic stories, Amis creates perplexing visions of a post-nuclear-holocaust world, highlighting schizophrenia, rape, brutality, and suppurating despair.

An ex-circus strongman, veteran of Warsaw, 1939, and Notting Hill rough-justice artist, meets his own personal holocaust and ‘Einsteinian’ destiny; maximum boredom and minimum love-making are advised in a 2020 epidemic; a virulent new strain of schizophrenia overwhelms the young son of a ‘father of the nuclear age’; evolu…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780099768913
ISBN-10:0099768917
Author:Martin Amis
Publisher:Vintage Publishing
Imprint:Vintage
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:128
Release Date:2 July 1999
Weight:98g
Dimensions:198mm x 130mm x 8mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“In five cataclysmic stories Amis creates perplexing visions of a post-nuclear-holocaust world, highlighting schizophrenia, rape, brutality and suppurating despair.” – Daily Mail

A phenomenal writer. He has style as quick and efficient as a flick-knife, and a gift for the grotesque that makes other people’s nightmares look like Victorian watercolours * Sunday Times *
Amis is first-rate; arguing inventing, demonstrating, parodying, being funny and shocking in the same breath * Observer *
Amis’s introduction to these five stories is a beautifully judged piece of polemic; a carefully reasoned emotionally charged attack on the unthinkable folly of nuclear war - an elegant, funny, moving book * Daily Telegraph *

About The Author

Martin Amis

Martin Amis was twenty-three when he wrote his first novel, The Rachel Papers (1973). Over the next half century - in fourteen more novels, two collections of short stories, eight works of literary criticism and reportage, and his acclaimed memoir, Experience - he established himself as the most distinctive and influential prose stylist of his generation. To many of his readers, Amis was also the funniest. His intoxicating comedic gifts express a profound understanding of the human experience, particularly its most shocking cruelties, and Amis wrote with pathos and verve on an astonishing range of subjects, from masculinity and movie violence to nuclear weapons and Nazi doctors. His books, which have been translated into thirty-eight languages, provide an indelible portrait and critique of late-capitalist society at the turn of the twenty-first century. He died in 2023.

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