Flowers for Algernon (Daniel Keyes)
Aug. 6th, 2004 02:00 pmFlowers for Algernon (Daniel Keyes): "But I know now there's one thing you've all overlooked: intelligence and education that hasn't been tempered with human affection isn't worth a damn." - Charlie Gordon
Classic story of the man whose impaired intelligence was boosted somewhere past genius for less than a year. It's hard to discuss this because it is a Classic and hard to consider independent of that. The idea that the novel is Charlie's journal/progress reports is really well implemented, showing through grammar and punctuation Charlie's rapid rise and fall in intelligence; the prose is workmanlike, not sparkling, beautiful like freeway bridges. The book was written in the 1960's, but the attitudes displayed by several characters toward the mentally retarded are depressingly contemporary.
Classic story of the man whose impaired intelligence was boosted somewhere past genius for less than a year. It's hard to discuss this because it is a Classic and hard to consider independent of that. The idea that the novel is Charlie's journal/progress reports is really well implemented, showing through grammar and punctuation Charlie's rapid rise and fall in intelligence; the prose is workmanlike, not sparkling, beautiful like freeway bridges. The book was written in the 1960's, but the attitudes displayed by several characters toward the mentally retarded are depressingly contemporary.