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Disgrace
Disgrace
Author: J. M. Coetzee
A white woman is gang-raped by blacks in this novel on post-apartheid South Africa. But she understands such settling of scores is inevitable, given what whites did to blacks, and she keeps the baby.
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ISBN-13: 9780965216555
ISBN-10: 0965216551
Publication Date: 1999
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 7

3.2 stars, based on 7 ratings
Publisher: Viking
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Disgrace on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
I picked up this book on the recommendation of a well-read friend. It did not disappoint.
The subject matter of this book is not at all easy to digest, and in another author's less capable hands it would merely be an uncomfortable shock to the reader. Coetzee's superb mastery of the written word enables you to become an unseen participant in a world that is as intriguing as it is disturbing. I was riveted by the complicated individuals that populate this book, the equally complicated and sometimes brutal environment they live in, and found myself alternately rooting for or scolding them for the decisions they made. Any writer that can affect me so with their characters is a master. But more than that, the world he creates is so real I found myself wondering what I would do, what decisions I would make... truly broadening and enlightening.

This is the first book that I have read by Coetzee and intend to seek out more of his work.
paigu avatar reviewed Disgrace on + 120 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Intellectual and thought-provoking. I actually felt badly for the main character despite his egocentric, sexist manner. Well-deserving of it's Book Award.
reviewed Disgrace on + 44 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Though well-written, this book is a bewildering look at the life of an amoral academic with whom it is fantastically difficult to empathize. He makes all the wrong moves at all the wrong times, and leads you to wonder, first, how he's managed to survive into his 50s, and second, how he's going to keep it up. The one thing I did enjoy about the book was the look into rural white South African life, which reveals just where the real differences, between the United States/Europe and the "developed" countries in Africa, lie.
caviglia avatar reviewed Disgrace on
Helpful Score: 4
I just finished Disgrace by J.M.Coetzee. It had been sitting on my shelf for a while and on Saturday I saw a really wonderful and moving exhibit of David Goldblatt's photography at The New Museum and was inspired to read it. It's pretty remarkable. It paints a really disturbing portrait of contemporary South Africa. It's not a difficult read, but it is a harrowing one.

This was my first Coetzee book and I was pretty much blown away. The relationship between the father and daughter felt as real and complicated as actual life. Nothing was simple, nothing was pat. I spent some time in South Africa a few years ago and reading this book was such a vivid experience, I could smell Africa. I don't know how in a 200 page book the complexities of such a troubled country could be painted so acutely, but Coetzee has somehow managed it.
reviewed Disgrace on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Unique, engaging, and also sad. Overall an excellent book.
Read All 42 Book Reviews of "Disgrace"

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reviewed Disgrace on
Very depressing and disturbing. The book is well-written by an accomplished writer, but the end result is the question, "Why bother creating a thoroughly ugly experience?" I threw the book away in stead of passing it on to anyone.
LivingInPurple avatar reviewed Disgrace on + 43 more book reviews
Great easy read. First time reading this author. Enjoyed his writing style.
reviewed Disgrace on + 3 more book reviews
I was engrossed by this book. Well written without any areas I skipped. Definitely recommend and in fact got another book by the same author from the club based on Disgrace.
NancyAZ avatar reviewed Disgrace on + 95 more book reviews
This is a powerful, well written book set in South Africa. It has a disturbing atmosphere delving into the changes brought about by the end of apartheid. It is this plus so much more.
It is the story of a man in his fifties and how he perceives and deals with his life and those around him. In reading other's reviews, I see he is unliked by many readers, but I did not feel that way. The story examines what an affair and a rape is like for both man and woman. It shows how people in post-apartheid are trying to adapt to the changes around them. The most upsetting part of the book to me was the cruelty to the animals. That definitely put a different spin on the book. One that I did not enjoy.
reviewed Disgrace on + 2 more book reviews
This was a thought-provoking story. I am pretty sure I'd be as frustrated with my daughter as Lurie was. But in the same token, I was equally as frustrated with Lurie at the beginning of the book. So much so, I almost didn't finish it. But I am certainly glad I stuck with it, because its a story that really made me think. How does one react to the circumstances that the protaganist and his daughter lived through?
littlestar avatar reviewed Disgrace on + 15 more book reviews
Beautiful book! I loved every bit of it.

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