Whatever

by Michel Houellebecq, Paul Hammond

Format: Paperback 176 pages

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Synopsis

Just thirty, with a well-paid job, depression and no love life, the narrator and anti-hero par excellence of this grim, funny and clever novel smokes four packs of cigarettes a day and writes weird animal stories in his spare time. A computer programmer by day, he is tolerably content, until, that is, he's packed off with a colleague - the unimaginably ugly, sexually-frustrated virgin Raphael Tisserand - to train provincial civil servants in the use of a new computer system. This is a painfully realistic portrayal of the vanishing freedom of a world governed by science and by the empty rituals of daily life.

Book details

Published
14/01/1999

Publisher
Serpent's Tail

ISBN
9781852425845



Publisher and industry reviews

UK Kirkus review

A massive success in France, Whatever displays a stylish disaffection with IT society. Its narrator is a computer programmer whose caustic contempt for life is a reaction to, rather than a existential rage against, the machine. Broken down by a gradually crushing boredom, his only release is writing very weird animal stories that reflect his disturbed psyche. This jaded attitude to late-20th-century urban society is US slacker philosophy, Gallic-style. Witty, literate and direct, it bravely attempts to isolate the cause of the 'slacker philosophy' malaise. (Kirkus UK)

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