ŷ

Bradley's Reviews > Jerusalem

Jerusalem by Alan             Moore
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
4213258
It took me ten days to read.
60 hours for an audiobook. Nearly 1300 pages.
Still, it took me ten days to read this. I'm shocked.

I'm also quite amazed at the brilliance of this book.

I'm thinking of also getting a bound copy of this book to open up at random whenever I want my mind blown and just stick my finger in it and osmose the hell out of it. It's that kind of dense, crazy book.

The only book that comes close to it is Infinite Jest, and I like Jerusalem a hell of a lot more. It has an enormous sharp cast of misfits, crazies, poets, junkies, whores, and dead kids... but wait! It also has the builders of reality, demons, nagas, and a little corner of Northampton called the Burroughs that is the nexus of all freaking reality and all the dead can travel up the street to the future or back down the street to the past and have a blast.

Seriously, the first load of the novel had me wondering if I was just reading a literary fiction like Infinite Jest with a ton of outcasts and thankfully interesting normals as they screwed, did drugs, or whatnot. All the while, I learned more and more and more about this little 'burb, it's history... sooooo much history... and then we started getting characters out of our modern setting in full glorious detail and imagining. The history is starting to get applied, practically. But still, I'm not totally impressed. After all, I came at this knowing that Moore can blow my mind as with the later volumes of Swamp Thing and V for Vendetta and Watchmen. I wanted SF or Fantasy or both.

And then a funny thing happened deep into the text.

A little kid choked on a cough drop for 11 freaking chapters.

WTF? Right? Realize something here: this is an author who grew up on all the greats of literature, and I see a ton of James Joyce right here. In fact, James Joyce shows up here. So does Samuel Beckett, Thomas Beckett, Cromwell, and even William Blake! :) Tons of poets and writers who are dead, along with this little kid, show up and travel all space and time. Mostly it's just the Dead Dead Gang, a group of 7 year olds who pit themselves against eternal demons and save the newly-dead kid from a deal with a really big-deal devil, take him under their wing, and travel up and down the streets of afterlife Burroughs where we REALLY get a taste of all that history that Moore has been giving us.

Pretty awesomely, in fact. :)

And then the "normal" characters keep poking their heads in on us in strange and unusual ways as we see below the fabric of reality and see in the fourth dimension and get the idea that "crazy" on our side is really just "saint" on the other. Things get really strange in a big way.

And even crack whores can be "Innocent" and "pivotal" in the salvation of the universe. :) Which hangs on a billard game being waged by the Builders, the angels and demons in this very *differently* imagined afterlife/4th dimensional landscape that's in so many ways so much better than Christopher Priest's The Inverted World and a hell of a lot more interesting and vivid, too. After all, we get to go 3 billion years in the future with a beautiful dead baby on a man's back to see the death of stars, too. :)

But the really big question that gets raised in this tome is the nature of predestination. Is everything set in stone? It's one hell of a clunker of a theme, and we get everything from crack whores to tons of poets to dead children to angels and demons asking this same question. And if the crux of the universe is this run-down barrow of a shithole and the second coming of christ is a 3-year-old who reaches brain-death before miraculously coming back to lead a normal life, we have to ask ourselves a lot of deep questions that's not strictly religious in nature.

And the language? Oh my god. Alan Moore writes a huge tract of poetry here. Think pre-dictionary middle-English poetry firmly ensconced in modern day sex scenes, science, and art, written floridly and gorgeously even when we're talking about flying sperm. It's not for the faint of heart, but it is certainly cray-cray and ambitious and we as readers can't take ANYTHING for granted. Are these characters simply well-drawn vehicles for an enormous showdown between the builders of the universe? Or is this also a subtle and not-so-subtle satire on literature, too? Both, I think.

I know one thing for sure. It's an amazing feat of literature. It's not easy and it's not meant to be, either, but it flows and everything is drawn to amazing limits and it's DEFINITELY NOT NORMAL. You want a challenge? You want ENORMOUS traditional literature, poetry, religious thinking, epic space/time travels, ghosts, historical persons, gritty neo-realism, and a major discourse on WHAT IS ART? Look no further. :)

Let's say we could write a book on this book. Or perhaps, someday, there will be whole courses on this massive tome like there is for James Joyce's Ulysses. You can plumb these depths for years and still find hidden gems. I'm certain of it. One read is definitely not enough. And if you publish your dissertation on his novel and get your PHD on his coattails, then congratulations! :)

I can totally understand if it daunts most people. I'm also intimidated. And I actually KNOW most of the artists and *some* of the history. And yet, I remain DAUNTED, too. :)

But it's so worth it. :)
254 likes · flag

Sign into ŷ to see if any of your friends have read Jerusalem.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

October 6, 2016 – Shelved
October 6, 2016 – Shelved as: to-read
February 1, 2017 – Started Reading
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: 2017-shelf
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: fantasy
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: satire
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: sci-fi
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: reality-bending
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: traditional-fiction
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: worldbuilding-sf
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: poetry
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: mindfuq
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: history
February 10, 2017 – Shelved as: humor
February 10, 2017 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-50 of 58 (58 new)


message 1: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Wow this might actually take you a bit of time to read


Bradley Probably two days. MAYBE three. It looks like a real monster. :)


Melissa ♥ Dog/Wolf Lover ♥ Martin What a great review, Brad :-)


message 4: by Trish (new) - added it

Trish *lol* Gotta love your enthusiasm although it doesn't sound like something I could enjoy (most of Alan Moore's stuff actually sounds as if it was too trippy for me).


message 5: by Matthias (new)

Matthias Well done on not only managing to reaf this but to also review it so passionately! I'd be sold if I didn't have the reading pace of a blind dog. This book would probably take me a lifetime.


Bradley It might COST you a lifetime to read it, too. :) It's a massive undertaking and I'm ALREADY considering a re-read. There's so much to consider and revisit and think about even as there's so much history and thought crammed in here, too.


So yeah, it didn't take 3 days. It took a glacial TEN. Of course, the BR I'm in for this book is pacing it for a whopping 4 months, so I'm still slightly ahead of the curve, but still.


Linda Brad - you can start your reread when I start my first read! I'll gear up in the next week or so. And hopefully it will not take me 4 months, I'm aiming for 2 months. :)


Bradley (insert unrepeatable and atrocious language here) No.

:)

I'll have discussions with everyone because there's a TON of things to talk about, but reading again this soon sounds like sticking (insert unrepeatable and atrocious language here) in my eyes. :)

I need a recovery period. Or a Builder-supervised psychoanalysis like a particle collider. :)

(Yes, I'm making references and even a quote from the book.)

:)


message 10: by Emmanuelle (new) - added it

Emmanuelle I am intrigued to say the least... And your review is almost a small book on itself. Nicely done!


message 11: by A. (new) - added it

A. Dawes I have been so unsure on whether to buy this. You've certainly convinced me otherwise.


Bradley You mean convince you against it? LoL I don't blame you, but I'm a changed man after having read it. :) I'm even now just beginning to choke on a throat lozenge. :)


message 13: by Michelle (new)

Michelle Morrell I have grand hopes about this novel, but need to wait until later this year to tackle it. I stumbled over a documentary on him over a decade ago (The Mindscape of Alan Moore) and have been trying to read my way through all his works since. Your review makes me happy though, thanks!


Bradley That's great! I'm happy to give hope! :) I'll be honest, though, it's still a daunting work and I'm no longer reading it! :) lol


Frank I am rapidly finishing this one up, and am, just don't know what to say at this point but different, incredible. Will not finish reading your review until I ma finished.


Bradley What a wild ride, right? Will you ever look at babies the same?


Bradley I just can't believe the cover art is FULLY EXPLAINED IN THE TEXT. :) lol


message 18: by Sud666 (new) - added it

Sud666 excellent review man


Bradley Thanks!


message 20: by Basia (new)

Basia Holy CRAP, Brad! What a review! Kick ASS awesome!


Bradley Lol thanks!


Trent Rogers lol It took me more than 10 days just to read the Lucia Joyce chapter.


Bradley It's LONG, isn't it? :) lol it FEELS long, not just BEING long. :)


message 24: by ˡ︎ (new) - added it

ˡ︎ Awesome review ! Makes me want to pick this up !


message 25: by Keith (new) - added it

Keith Man, I got this for Xmas and read the first chapter and was like "NOPE," and set it aside. But this review gets me excited. Maybe I'll read it for a summer project.


Bradley Consider this a wild and impressive CHALLENGE and you'll have the right attitude to see you through it. :) It's damn imaginative. :)


Linda I'm nearing the 50% mark, listening to it. It's easily going to be among my favorites of 2017.


Bradley As I think of it, it might live longer than that for me. :)


message 29: by Choko (new) - added it

Choko Amazing review! Now I am going to find time and read it...


Linda Brad wrote: "As I think of it, it might live longer than that for me. :)"

Longer than just 2017? Yes, definitely. I thought of that later after I posted my comment. :)


Bradley Lol, should we upgrade it to half-a-dozen? Maybe a whole decade? ;)


Linda It'll probably still be on my favorites list by the time I make my way to the second boroughs. :)


Bradley lol :)


message 34: by Omekafalconburn (new)

Omekafalconburn I was about to write a review then read this one and it say's everything I wanted to, great review Brad. I would only add that "I" realised I was reading something of greatness when Thursa Vernall blared out her piano accordion in harmony with a grieving mother, what a scene! And don't even get me started on the Mammoth ride! An absolute joy to read, this is one of the greatest books maybe "the greatest" I have ever read, I even feel a little better about death due to it. Just keep an eye on those corners. One to enjoy for life. Cheers Matt


Bradley It was a certain choking scene that grabbed me, lol. I was like... FINALLY, some supernatural stuff! :) lol And thanks! :)


Campbell This is the best thing written this century, by quite some distance. And the book's not bad either ;)


message 37: by Jamrock (new)

Jamrock as ever your reviews guide me and encourage me


Bradley Every book read is a love letter to the author. ---- assuming there's a review at the end. :) Pass it on to Moore. :)


message 39: by dp (new)

dp Delightful review! Honestly one of the best reviews I've ever read


Bradley Thanks! :)


message 41: by Travis (new) - added it

Travis Williams 10 days! This would take me 10 months. I love to read, but am soooo slow and easily distracted. Any suggestions or “how to� books you can recommend? I’m always impressed with the amount of books you seem to get trough and always enjoy and trust your reviews. Thanks!!


Bradley Do you want suggestions on How-To books? I used to read a few a couple of decades ago but in general, they're now hopelessly out of date. Programming books.

Otherwise, I've read a few good books on writing. :)

I don't really do How-To books anymore. ; ;


message 43: by Dennis (new)

Dennis Your plan initially was to read this in two days?! Even though it's 60 hours of audio! You're quite confident, aren't you?! Lol.

I'm into my third month of The Stand, btw.


message 44: by Trish (new) - added it

Trish 60hours is 30hours for him, meaning 15hours per day so it's realistic in Brad's context (no, he isn't normal, nobody ever said he was).


Bradley Well, best-laid plans and all. As it was, I still intended to read one book a day AND this, so that kinda explains why it took 10 in the end. Plus, Jerusalem is PACKED with goodies that don't do well at fast-speed. And in fact, I couldn't go fast. I just aimed for steady at 1.5x. :)

It Happens. lol


message 46: by Sud666 (new) - added it

Sud666 Brad great review. I was thinking about reading this and now I am certain to do so. Thanks.


Bradley Have fun! You'll get bragging rights! :) ;)


PaddytheMick it totally deserves all of this glowing praise.


Bradley WILD, isn't it???


message 50: by Crystal (new)

Crystal I got to the end of this book’s 1300 pages and immediately went back to the beginning to start over. I did the same with Infinite Jest, years ago, but this book is so much more sane and optimistic in its outlook.

Great review.


« previous 1
back to top