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Hardcover Why Do Birds Book

ISBN: 031285174X

ISBN13: 9780312851743

Why Do Birds

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Book Overview

A novel that explores the power of persuasion features the deceitful acts of Ed Stone, who convinces entire nations that he has been chosen to preserve humanity in a massive vault suspended in space. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Moldy

Once again I got a moldy used book. I will only be buying new books if at all

Koans have no punchline.

Damon Knight was a revered writer, critic, editor and teacher within science fiction and he knew the ins and outs of his genre as well as anyone ever has. This book is clearly a product of a lifetime of working within the field (along with his last book "Humpty: An Oval"), and is only more enjoyable the more of its tropes you recognize. It plays as one extended riff on a very old idea, and part of the pleasure in reading it comes from recognizing the frequent references to earlier versions of itself. It is always plainly evident how much fun it must have been to write, and that carries over to the reader. The story flows with effortless smoothness, never pausing for exposition or to try to make sense of the compounded absurdities of the plot, and Knight never tips his hand as to what it's all about. I'm a close reader and I've read this book several times, and I'm still impressed by how seamless the tale is in the telling; Knight makes an absolutely preposterous story seem plainly obvious, and that is a difficult feat. Is Ed Stone a pawn or a monster? Is he a con artist or a fraud? Or is he simply what he claims to be, a man wrenched out of time and given an absurd mission by "aliens"? Anyone expecting a satisfying resolution or explanation of what's going on is bound to be disappointed, nor is this a conventional character study (even by sf's lax standards). Much of the story's appeal comes from its irresistible momentum once it gets going, and the subtle way Knight uses transparently cartoonish caricatures to make brief, slashing observations about the way the world works and is. The politicians, businessmen, hustlers, and miscellaneous authority figures with whom Stone interacts hardly seem realistic, but that seems to be much of Knight's point. Really, the books this reminds me of most are John Brunner's apocalyptic early-70s novels "The Sheep Look Up", "The Jagged Orbit", "Stand On Zanzibar" and "The Shockwave Rider". Like Brunner, Knight was deeply preoccupied with humanity's welfare, and like Brunner, he seemed ambivalent about its ultimate chances for survival. Like most satires, this book has a point. Like most good satires, it's not immediately obvious what that point is.

A comic apocalypse -- interesting but not quite brilliant

Why Do Birds is Damon Knight's second-last novel, from 1992. It is described on the cover, fairly accurately, as "A Comic Novel of the Destruction of the Human Race". (Actually, it's not clear that the Human Race is actually destroyed.) The main character is Ed Stone, who shows up in 2002 claiming to be from 1931, despite being about 30 years old. He says aliens kidnapped him and kept him on their spaceship for 70 years, and now they have released him and given him a job. He is supposed to convince everyone on Earth to voluntarily enter a huge cube, and go into suspended animation. Then the aliens will take everyone somewhere, while the Earth will be destroyed. Naturally people think he's crazy -- indeed, he thinks he might be crazy. But he has a ring that compels anyone he shakes hands with to believe him. Before long he is meeting the President and other political leaders, and the Cube Project is well under way. He also acquires a girlfriend and a number of additional allies. But there are a few people who oppose his plans, in some cases for sinister reasons. The narrative is deadpan, simple on the surface, often quite funny. Ed is a curious character -- not quite likeable, a bit sinister himself, but in the end someone we sort of root for. His girlfriend Linda Lavalle is rather more likeable. The story plays out over a dozen years or so, as the Cube is built, while the forces arrayed against Ed raise doubts about his story, and Linda has her own loyalties tested. The ending is pretty much as we are compelled to expect, and mostly satisfying. That said, I couldn't love the book -- parts of it made me impatient, and I must confess I am not sure what Knight was really up to. Certainly the aliens and their plans are never explained. There are hints that the world of the book is not quite our world (besides the obvious differences between the 2002 Knight imagined as of 1992 and the real 2002). There are strange occurrences that might imply something really odd is going on, but I never figured out just what. Knight is never less than interesting, but I never really warmed to his book -- perhaps simply because I failed to grasp it fully.

Time

The first time i read this book in my early teens, i didn't really like it. i thought it seemed like a cool idea that didn't really go anywhere. i'd never heard of Damon Knight before, and i probably picked the book up because of the title, Why Do Birds. Yet i have read many, many books since. The mass majority of them i've forgotten, yet this book has always stayed with me for the same reason the title once captured my attention. this story is so incomplete, yet so unforgetable. it's like an experience that was unsatisfactory at the time yet for some reason becomes a cherished memory. there is something fantastic about this book, something which i find myself thinking about more and more as the years go on, yet something that, even now, i cannot put my finger on. Thank you, Damon Knight, if you ever read these reviews. i truly appreciate how you've stimulated my mind, and i truly appreciate you writing this incredible book.

great novel

Damon Knight has created a rather haunting and slightly whimsical piece (in the same vein as George Alec Effinger's: Two Sadnesses). The book isn't a long worded comedy and people reading it shouldn't be expecting Douglas Adams or Terry Pratchett ... this novel is above all that. It's humor isn't based on physical humor or pure absurdity, I found it more sad than anything else. I highly recommend this novel to anyone who's not just looking for a hollow laugh ... to someone who enjoys a book that transcends the popular boundaries of the genre and transcends it well.
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