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Original Title: | Myra Breckinridge/Myron |
ISBN: | 0394754441 (ISBN13: 9780394754444) |
Edition Language: | English |
Gore Vidal
Paperback | Pages: 417 pages Rating: 3.71 | 906 Users | 86 Reviews
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Myra Breckinridge (1968) is a scabrous genderbender satire about an untouchable woman(?) out to claim her fortune from a sleazy Hollywood mogul. If you’re familiar with Gore Vidal’s haughtiness from one of his incalculable TV appearances it might take a moment to settle into this female(?) voice, but once the farcical frolics begin the novel is heap-good-fun. Among the more notorious scenes are Myra’s dildo rape of male chauvinist Rusty, and her failure to achieve Sapphic congress with the defiantly heterosexual Mary-Ann. Seen here in the appalling film version with the perfectly cast Raquel Welch. This book is notable also for Vidal’s use of nouveau roman S-o-C in the mogul’s narrative—his opinion on the French avant-garde was famously low, so what gives, Gore? Five stars. Myron (1974) is the patchy, semi-sci-fi sequel where Myron (the male Myra) is sucked back onto the set of Siren of Babylon, a fictional 1948 movie where his alter-ego Myra wrestles for domination of his/her body, like Michael Caine in Dressed to Kill but with castration instead of murder. Not for the squeamish this one. And largely incoherent, so not for anyone at all, really. Three stars.Present Out Of Books Myra Breckenridge/Myron
Title | : | Myra Breckenridge/Myron |
Author | : | Gore Vidal |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 417 pages |
Published | : | September 12th 1987 by Vintage Books USA (first published 1968) |
Categories | : | Fiction. LGBT. Gay. Novels. Literature. American. GLBT. Queer |
Rating Out Of Books Myra Breckenridge/Myron
Ratings: 3.71 From 906 Users | 86 ReviewsWeigh Up Out Of Books Myra Breckenridge/Myron
Being two separate books, this requires two reviews.Myra Breckenridge is the predecessor to transgressive literature. One can see how much Palahniuk pulled from Vidal's delivery of the twist when he wrote Fight Club. Vidal succeeds with his tremendous feat of combining obscene ideas with satirical and critical opinions of materialist America and its conservative agendas. Myron is a less funny, a less extreme, a less innovative, a less interesting version of Myra. Throwing the couple into 1940sGore Vidals satirical novel, Myra Breckenridge was, at one point, shocking. That it is no longer shocking---and, in fact, so ridiculously un-shocking as to be a soap opera cliche---is a testament to how much societys views have changed on the books primary subject matter.Ostensibly, the book is about a lot of things. Vidal was a humorous and caustic social critic who, like some of his more relevant contemporaries (Kurt Vonnegut, Norman Mailer, Philip Roth), explored the inanity of the times
Like Heinlein laying off "Stranger in a Strange Land" until the big cultural wheel turned into the 60s. Free love meant that everybody was running beyond any capacity to shock sexually; tearing down the last great wall of conservatism in a taggle of arms, legs and other dangly body parts. How did we get so staid again? Oh yeah, a killer sex plague! Handily, a moral weapon to aim at homosexuals in particular. Saved! A graphic novel. Sadly, the big reveal of the story was known to me... somehow;
Laugh-out-loud funny. Shocking, vulgar, bawdy. Initially found it intriguing because no, had never read anything like this before. Found Gore Vidal to be clever and initially it held my interest -- picked the book up simply because I wanted to see what Vidal was all about as a esteemed writer of our time. While initially I felt that this was a 4-star work, I definitely dinged it for "the scene" toward the end with Rusty and Myra. Since I don't want a spoiler here, not going to elaborate.....but
Another old blog...I recently finished reading Gore Vidal's Myra Breckenridge and the sequel, Myron. I don't really know what more to say about this book other than it was about a freakin' SCHIZOPHRENIC TRANSEXUAL! It was pretty funny, in it's own way, but is also kind of intimidating in it's discussions of sexual power over others, and the things some (psychotic) people will do to attain that power. Myra Breckenridge was written entirely from the perspective of post-sex-change Myra (formerly
Myra Breckinridge is one Sick Twist. I found this book shocking...and I am not easily shocked. Myra is a trannie, a sadist, a revolutionary and completely nuts. However, Vidal's 1968 title character cannot be classified with most of the one-dimensional psycho transgender characters so common in our cultural production (Dressed to Kill, Sleepaway Camp and Silence of the Lambs to name a few). Myra believes that all human relations are based on "the desire in each of us to exercise absolute power
Two of the greatest satires ever written. Two of my favorite books of all time. I was reading a book by a current best-selling comedic author. I was in a state of un-grippedness. Read like a book being written in preparation for getting optioned as a movie (no style, which is very popular nowadays). I picked up Myra Breckenridge and read the first chapter (two pages long). I laughed out loud and was in awe. THIS IS WRITING.Vidal is one of the greatest writers ever. One of my personal heroes.
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