Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The "challenges" of Times Arrow

Time's Arrow is a remarkable imaginative achievement, and it places special demands on the reader. Disorientation is one's initial response to a world in which time moves in reverse and effect always precedes cause. A simple process like gardening becomes a bizarre ritual of uglification when it takes place in reverse: "all the tulips and roses he patiently drained and crushed, then sealed their exhumed corpses and took them in the paper bag to the store for money. All the weeds and nettles he screwed into the soil--and the earth took this ugliness, snatched at it with a sudden grip" (18-19). Everything in Time's Arrow is narrated backwards: old people become younger and more vigorous, children grow smaller and eventually enter hospitals from which they never return. Eating, drinking, love-making, even an abortion are all described in reverse. Early on, Amis even reverses words and sentences, so that "how are you today?" becomes "Aid ut oo y'rrah?"

From Martin Amis' Website

2 comments:

  1. Notice the phrase "early on." Don't fret about the backwards speech--doesn't last long.

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  2. Would it be okay if we made a list of events that happen where "Good is Bad" and "Bad is Good" and discussed why these events are either good or bad in society? --Morgan Quinton

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