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• Barnes, Julian
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Fiction
Staring at the Sun
Staring at the Sun

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Author: Julian Barnes
Publisher: Alfred a Knopf
Category: Book

List Price: £8.91
Buy Used: £0.26
You Save: £8.65 (97%)



New (4) Collectible (2) from £18.55

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 197

ISBN: 0394558219
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780394558219
ASIN: 0394558219

Publication Date: April 1987
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Book is in good condition. Pages are clean and the binding is tight. Buy with confidence. We ship daily and guarantee satisfaction. This item will ship from the United States.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Staring at the Sun (Perennial Fiction Library)
  • Hardcover - Staring at the Sun
  • Hardcover - Staring at the Sun (Picador Books)
  • Paperback - Staring At The Sun
  • Paperback - Staring at the Sun
  • Hardcover - Staring At Sun-Canada

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Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Maybe There Is an Absolute   November 24, 2002
 7 out of 9 found this review helpful

There are some questions that men and women have been asking since questions were formed and given their name. And for these questions there still are no answers, no proof that a person who has fears can rely on, can take absolute unconditional comfort in. For me this is what Mr. Julian Barnes was addressing in his book, "Staring Into The Sun", for you it may be different, but I believe you will share the enjoyment I have gained.

This is the 9th book I have read by this Author. While I would not presume to claim I know what his message has been in the other 8 books, I do feel I had a better grasp with those I previously read than with this novel. All of the writer's work leaves plenty of room to drill down and experience his books as a reader. This time he was not just exercising his talents creating either a uniquely interpretive work, or a wholly original one, rather he was addressing what is common to us all.

Jean Sarjeant is described on the jacket as, "having an extraordinary disdain for wisdom". Another character in the book describes her as abysmally stupid. This book tracks her life for a century, and she is many things, however neither those descriptions I have just mentioned. Jean is extremely inquisitive; she also is unconventional to the point that some may find her a bit eccentric. In the course of the book she has a son that shares all of her disinterest in what normal society defines as "normal".

The issues at hand and the answers to the questions they have generated for millennia, having nothing to do with conventional wisdom, nor do they shed their answers when confronted by a high I.Q. or the most technologically advanced man-made machine. This is not so much a story about answers, but of differentiating between knowledge and understanding, and acceptance or the rejection of an idea due to lack of definitive information.

The Absolute Truth, which takes the form of T.A.T. in the book, is embraced by many and rejected by Jean. In the latter parts of the book, radical changes have taken place in society's views of death, but death itself never has changed nor does it here. Jean pursues those big unknowns that everyone struggles with, at one point or another, in her own manner, while her son pursues the quest he is on through technology.

I found it interesting that I finished this novel just as we embark on the year 2001, a date that has been anticipated for so long due to Arthur C. Clarke and his, "2001 A Space Odyssey". We have not reached the levels of technology that he envisioned, and I believe the same may be said for our own carbon-based development as well. Mr. Clarke delved into the most fundamental of issues, and Mr. Barnes takes his turn here. This time the story stretches to 2021, the issue is what more have we learned if we have learned any more at all.

The book is striking, and the special sunrises and a sunset are very dramatic. The questions may be old, and they may also never be answered. However as long as the topic is dealt with using the talent of Mr. Barnes and others, their ideas will always be interesting to read.

As to the absolute comment, it may be that certain questions have never had answers, and that they never will.



5 out of 5 stars Stunning   October 19, 2002
 9 out of 10 found this review helpful

Breaktakingly good prose, from a true master.

A book that tells the 100 year story of one woman, taking us from the nineteen twenties to the twenty twenties. It is enormously sympathetic. The book poses many questions about life, and credits the reader with the intelligence to find his or her own answers.

Moving, and ultimately quite melancholy, it is the sort of book that will leave you feeling emotionally richer.

There is a review quote on the back of the book which says "Undoubtedly much too good to win the Booker prize"

No kidding.


5 out of 5 stars A book of wondrous things...   July 23, 2001
 7 out of 8 found this review helpful

it follows the life of a young woman from the II WW up to her last days in the following Century. A book that leaves one, though slightly melancholy, with a warm feeling inside. It's like an old house, full of unexplored rooms and every room having its own particular smell, story and mood. Jean, the main character grows up and introduces us to an array of other characters. From a fighter pilot that saw the sun rise twice; her cowardly or is he brave?, Uncle Leslie and his wonderful tricks; up to her own somewhat insipid son, who dissatisfied with his insipid life contemplates suicide. The book spans nearly a hundred years and though it is written in the last quarter of the last century Mr. Barnes creates a believable 2000 and beyond. Even the role of computers and a sort of World Wide Web is foreseen in his well crafted book; well worth a read.

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