PowerBook

by Jeanette Winterson

Hardcover, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

813

Publication

Knopf Canada (2000), Edition: 1st American Edition

Description

The PowerBookis twenty-first century fiction that uses past, present and future as shifting dimensions of a multiple reality. The story is simple. An e-writer called Ali or Alix will write to order anything you like, provided that you are prepared to enter the story as yourself and take the risk of leaving it as someone else. You can be the hero of your own life. You can have freedom just for one night. But there is a price to pay.

User reviews

LibraryThing member whirled
The PowerBook offers more of what Jeanette Winterson's fans have come to expect - interesting ruminations on the nature of love and sex in her elegant, economical style. Written at the turn of the century, the novel's central conceit - linking each chapter to a different computer function - now
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seems naive and dated. Not for the first time, Winterson rescues her book from mediocrity via the sheer beauty of her words.
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LibraryThing member mich_yms
There were many aspects of this book that I found intriguing and engaging. Perhaps one that is worth mentioning is how the story keeps shifting. First we read about the storyteller, then we see it as the character of a story being written, then as the person whom the story is directed to. Again and
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again we are given different perspectives to ponder, different characters to emphatize with, different roles to play. We are constantly transported to different worlds and realms, moving back and forth between reality and virtuality.

The beauty of it all is that none of this leaves us readers out in the dark. We know what they know. We feel what they feel. We are, in a sense, the characters in the book, and the characters within the stories in the book. We are one with them, and yet, we transform and merge into other characters with such ease, it is quite quite exhilarating.

This book was beautifully written.
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LibraryThing member 391
The language in The Powerbook is simply fantastic - Winterson is a masterful author, and she really pulls out all the stops with this one.
LibraryThing member RebeccaAnn
I'm at a bit of a loss at how to describe this book. It's most definitely not conventional. It's confusing but at the same time, strangely clear. It's without a doubt one of the most beautifully written books I've ever read. It's a love story that ends in both a heartbreaking and yet a hopeful
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manner. It shows the power of stories. It evokes so many different emotions. It's about ambiguous identity and erasing the binary opposition between males and females.

Honestly, the first scene is very...strange. But I hope is doesn't deter anyone from reading this book. I really enjoyed this book and it's going on to my list of memorable reads. It's one of those books that just begs to be reread over and over. I wish I could write a better review for this book but I'm tired so this will have to do for now. I hope I've encouraged someone to try this book out though :)
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LibraryThing member sturlington
I was never quite sure what the point of this book was the whole time I was reading it. I recognized that the title and several chapter heads referred to Macintosh computers, but there really was no computer in the book. Instead, there was a series of loosely joined stories, some based on legends
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from the past, some bordering on fairy tales, and others slices of present-day life.

The center of the story is a rather mundane lesbian love affair. They desperately love each other, want to be together, can’t be together, then maybe… But the meat of the book is lost in a lot of filler that, while sometimes engaging, ultimately never gets into that bigger something it’s trying so hard to be.
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LibraryThing member librarybrandy
A novel written in short stories, a collection of short stories that make up a novel... it's Jeanette Winterson, so who can even tell for sure. This is a meditation on love, a relationship in metaphor, an exploration of sexuality and sensuality. Maybe not her best book, though I suspect I'd have
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gotten more out of it were I better versed in Virgina Woolf (particularly Orlando).
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LibraryThing member Paulagraph
Classic Winterson. Twenty years ago, I would have given it a couple more stars, I suspect. As the narrator divulges near the beginning, it's always about boundaries and desire. Best are the petite tales within the Tale.
LibraryThing member WildMaggie
I'm giving it 2 1/2 stars because it did keep me reading even though I really didn't know what was going on for a lot of the book. Seems like not have a plot is kind of the point but it makes this so so post-modern as to be nearly incomprehensible. Can't really say much about the characters either
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as it was often not clear who was who; even who was speaking though long unsupported sections of dialog. Lots of short, often interesting and/or compelling snippets, some of which are achingly beautifully written, that don't ever really add up to anything I could call a story. More like a series of vignettes some clearly related to each other and some with more opaque reason for being included.
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LibraryThing member Overgaard
Last chapters reminiscent of City of the Mind by Penelope Lively. Highly inventive love story traveling through the centuries.

Awards

Women's Prize for Fiction (Longlist — 2001)
Lambda Literary Award (Nominee — 2000)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2000

Physical description

5 inches

ISBN

0676973345 / 9780676973341

Barcode

13241
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