Reviews

Millennium People by J.G. Ballard

nohbody's review against another edition

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medium-paced
  • Loveable characters? No

2.5

robertrivasplata's review against another edition

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4.0

Novel bringing all your favourite Ballardisms (mysterious quasi-cult led by diseased charismatic leader, automotive technological fetishism, all viewed through the eyes of a privileged unreliable narrator) into the world of early 2000s London. I remember Crash, Super Cannes, Hello America, & Drowned World taking a while for me to get through & digest, so I'm trying to decide if I zipped through Millennium People because it's one of Ballard's more readable Novels, or if I've just finally become versed in reading Ballard, or oddball literature in general. Millennium people is peppered with what feel like portents of our current world, but the brief discussions of how the more pointless a terrorist attack, the more potent it is seem the most prophetic today. This book is a good place to go looking for quoteable quotes about bourgeois foibles, pop culture, & our neoliberalist world.

komencanto's review against another edition

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4.0

I originally picked this up as a consolation prize because I couldn't find a copy of Ballard's "Crash" at the public library. From my knowledge of that book, this features a similar structure of an outsider slowly being subsumed by a strange subculture he initially intends to investigate. The central "mystery" and general arc of the main character are apparent immediately, but the author seems to just use those as a structure to hang a handful of interesting characters and provocative set-pieces.

thekarpuk's review against another edition

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3.0

Something can only strive for a certain level of irony before I start feeling like I don't know how seriously to treat the subject matter.

Oddly, this feeling comes from the quality of J.G. Ballard's writing. It's very fluid and pulls you into the situation with ease. The trouble is the situation.

It all centers around a middle class rebellion that the narrator gets pulled into through a bomb at the Heathrow airport that kills his ex-wife. The middle class rebellion in question is over utterly petty concerns such as utility fees and so forth, and they express their anger by smoke bombing video stores and ruining movie theaters that show classic cinema.

It's a silly reason, one that I can't imagine any group of middle class citizens actually rallying around. Therefore I have to consider it an absurdist sort of statement. What creates a sort of dissonance is how deadly earnest the rest of the story is. There's not a lot of humor, or a suggestion that the whole story is one big ironic statement about the middle class or modern culture.

Maybe it's the narrator of my audiobook edition. Maybe his delivery just prevented me from seeing just how whimsical the whole thing is supposed to be.

Or maybe I just don't get middle class culture in England, which is apparently a lot more posh than its American equivalent.

clairesbeat's review against another edition

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dark mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

librarimans's review against another edition

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As interested as I was in the premise of this book (uprising of the middle class in England) I just could not get into it. I'm sure Ballard is a fine writer but he could not hold my interest at all and I think I only last about 60 pages of this book before throwing in the towel

nex3's review against another edition

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3.0

I can't get behind this nihilist middle class revolution that has nothing at all to say about the working class

secretbookcase's review against another edition

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challenging dark medium-paced

3.5

darwin8u's review against another edition

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5.0

"He was trying to find meaning in the most meaningless times, the first of new kind of desperate man who refuses to bow before the arrogance of existence and the tyranny of space-time."
- J.G. Ballard, Millennium People

description

"A vicious boredom ruled the world, for the first time in human history, interrupted by meaningless acts of violence."
- J.G. Ballard, Millennium People

description

I read a Ballard novel amazed at how accurately he captures the now. It has been said by others before, but he really is our PKD. He captures, in this book, random shootings, Brexit, and Trump. He captures perfectly the rebellion of the middle-class. I have to let this book settle in me. I might be a bit too enthusiastic in this moment. But God this novel was grand. One of my top 5 Ballard novels, and the man can hardly write a bad novel.