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Paperback Random Acts of Senseless Violence Book

ISBN: 0802134246

ISBN13: 9780802134240

Random Acts of Senseless Violence

(Part of the Dryco Series)

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Jack Womack's fifth novel centers on Lola Hart, a girl whose family falls on hard times and moves to near-future Harlem. There, surrounded by the new language and violence of the streets, Lola's... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Impossible to put down, too easy to pick up time after time

This is one of the finest novels of near-future America ever written. That may sound like a sweeping statement, but Womack's terrifying vision of the final years of a 20th century where an adolescent army exerts a brutal discipline on New York, global warming and pollution have turned summers into poisonous nightmares and the country's economy is disintegrating almost as fast as accepted social values has no sharper, keener rival in contemporary fiction.I first read this book in 1995 after being sucked into Womack's twisted universe through Elvissey, still one of my favourite sci-fi novels. And though the science fiction genre has broadened vastly since the days of Ray Bradbury and Arthur C. Clarke, Random Acts still defies simple categorisation. There's no doubt it has sci-fi elements, but Like Orwell's 1984, I feel that Womack has tried not only to illustrate a nightmare portrayal of the near-future, but grasp the zeitgeist of mid-90s American society and break it down into its basest elements, shaping it and containing it in the most ideal setting in which to maximise its sense of claustrophobia, paranoia and arrogance - Manhattan Island.The rapid urban decay of a world where presidents are assassinated like flies, police and soldiers wield their power like medieval tyrants, poorer neighbourhoods have reverted to tribal warzones and an inherent culture of hate, fear and anger permeate daily life is presented superbly through the diary of 12-year-old Lola. Womack's keen sense of Lola's pre-adolescent mind coming to terms not only with the crumbling world around her but also deeper, personal issues such as the disintegration of her family network and her own blossoming sexuality always remains evocative and concise. The first-person narrative moves flawlessly, and the decay of the world around Lola is mirrored brilliantly with her descent from conservative, middle-class comfort to an immersion in the angry and violent street life of Manhattan. The most impressive vehicle Womack uses to describe this descent is the rapidly mutating form of Lola's narrative - in her first diary entries, the language she uses is that of a sheltered and innocent young, white Anglo-Saxon; by the story's end, it has transformed into the bizarre, poetic concoction of Latino, ghetto slang and bastardised English that constitutes gang dialect. Womack further develops his concept of future-speak in Elvissey, Ambient and his other novels with astounding creativity, and his linguistic capabilities are equally as clever as Burgess in A Clockwork Orange or anything by William Gibson.It's a frightening microcosm that Womack depicts in Random Acts, and only the precursor to a world that grows more warped and hostile through the five other novels that succeed it chronologically. If you've never read Womack's work before, start here, and get ready for the ride of your life.

One of the 10 best books of the 20th century !!!!

I first read this book back in '95 when I was an employee at Tower books in Seattle. I'd read the back and the inside flap and was skeptical that I'd like it. The format of 1st person and diary form are two things I normally don't care for. I could not have been more wrong. It's 6 years later and I am still raving about this brilliant and horrifying tale, I have a signed 1st edition copy and a reading copy to loan out to everyone I can.The disarming narrative of 12 year old Lola Hart lulls you into her adolescent world of friends and budding sexuality only to turn her world and Manhattan upside down with sadistic entusiasm. This story is not for the faint of heart. The transformation of Lola after her family circumstances turn from prosperous to dire is sheer literary genius in it's insidious simplicity. Not only is Lola's character so compelling but Womack never misses an opportunity to saterize society with sharp painful jabs of scathing observation and wit. This book works on so many LEVELS!!!! You cannot put it down and after you've read it you will never forget it. The last sentence (and don't you dare skip ahead and read it) knocked the wind out of me. I stared at it for a long time. This book is on par with such classics as Perfume, Johhny Got His Gun, Catcher in the Rye, and A Clockwork Orange. I even named my dog after Lola. Everyone should read this book.

Riveting and heartbreaking

In this amazing novel, Jack Womack creates an unforgettable and heartbreaking character in Lola, a twelve-year-old girl who receives a diary as a gift and in it chronicles her own descent into barbarism as her family moves down the social ladder in some future, hellish version of New York City. While the colorful invented slang is reminiscent of A Clockwork Orange, for me, on another level, the novel brought back memories of Lord of the Flies. As the adults around her try to cope with the chaos and depression in their lives and recede into the background of her life, Lola finds herself increasingly on her own. She and her friends band together in order to survive in a hostile environment, and bit by bit, Lola sacrifices her humanity to her need to make it through another day. In the end, no matter how cultured she is, no matter how well educated she is, she surrenders to the beast within in order to stay alive. This is a tragic novel in the truest sense.

Harrowing, terrifying, and gripping.

I work nights at a very dull, low-paying job, so I spend quite a bit of time reading books from my college library. I was beginning to despair of finding a decent, *original* read when I checked out RANDOM. I am in chills just writing about it.RANDOM is a story about a young girl, Lola, living in an apocalyptic New York City. Womack's story is like a haunted house; at the entrace you're a bit giddy and excited, but by the time you reach the main staircase you're drooling into your collar and crying for Mommy. The only difference is that the haunted house has an EXIT door. RANDOM ends in a spiral of infinite darkness.Womack's amazing use of language helps to illustrate the breakdown of Lola's remaining innocence and humanity. She exchanges her teenage babble for the angry, nearly incomprehensible tongue of the anarchy, and by the last page, she has become a stranger to us, and where she leads we cannot follow. The violence and despair is glaringly evident on every page without lapsing into out-and-out gore, and Lola's foray into physical love with other girls is provocative without being seedy.Like Margaret Atwood's HANDMAID'S TALE (another terrific futuristic drama), RANDOM presents us with a picture of what could happen to our world if society contiunes on a certain path. Without lecturing or making any overt political statements, Womack shows us the truly evil sides of both the extreme right and the extreme left.This was my first time reading Womack, and since I hope to keep my dull night job at least until I graduate, I'm sure it won't be the last.

Dear Anne

Jack Womack uses the writing form of a diary as a vehicle to get the reader inside the mind of an adolescent girl. Lola begins her story at the age of twelve when she discovers her diary can become her best friend. She names it Anne and commits herself to writing in it everyday. Lola's friendship with Anne is what makes this book so unique. It allows the reader to get involve once they realize that they have become Anne. Lola holds nothing back, from Anne, as she describes her day, feelings and fears. The fact is Lola has no one else to trust, only Anne "You give earwhen everybody deafs and lend me a shoulder constant if tears need dropping." The way she emotionally communicates with Anne helps the reader understand all the pain she is feeling. They are then able to feel compassion and love toward her, to the point were they could allow and excuse her random acts of senseless violence. This is a great book that show cases Womack's ability to get inside of a character. Also his ability to get me, as the reader, involved in Lola's life. His writing stile makes it really easy to read and understand. It is like reading mail from a very close friend who writes to me everyday. I really enjoyed this book and recommended to people that like to get involved in their books, so go buy it.
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