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Book Reviews of The Intuitionist

The Intuitionist
The Intuitionist
Author: Colson Whitehead
ISBN-13: 9780708898475
ISBN-10: 0708898475
Publication Date: 4/26/2017
Pages: 255
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 1

4 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Fleet
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

6 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Leigh avatar reviewed The Intuitionist on + 378 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book's greatest flaw is its complexity, both in subject and in style. Whitehead uses the backdrop of simple, pulp, boiled-down noir fiction to present a rather intricate metaphor on race, using elevators to demonstrate it. I found myself distracted by the metaphorwhat did he mean? In order to raise something (someone?), there had to be a counterweight involvedsomething (someone) must be forced down. What did he mean by Intuition vs. Empiricism? How on Earth would Intuition ever be accepted as a realistic way to inspect elevators? Wouldn't you actually have to look at them? What about the philosophical history of Empiricismshould I consider that at all? So distracted was I with solving this puzzle of a plot with all sorts of characters who weren't what they seemed that I couldn't enjoy the story. It's like being so set on figuring out a Rubik's Cube that you forget that it's supposed to be fun and end up returning it back to the box in the garage.

Then, also, Whitehead is crazy amazing with language and wrote so beautifully and elegantly that I again became distracted, trying to dissect his sentences. The way this man uses the English language astounds me. His observations so keen and seamless; they all gave me pause and slowed my reading down considerably.

The payoff comes at the very end for everyone confused or unsure of the metaphor; it all makes sense and you think, "Oh. I had it all along." I prefer Apex Hides the Hurt to this one, but this wasn't a bad read at all. Whitehead is a writer that will be mentioned in books far after we're gone. He's that good.
LaurieS avatar reviewed The Intuitionist on + 504 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I wanted to enjoy this book, all of the reviews I've read said I should, but after slogging through two discs and constantly having to back track because my mind had drifted away I'm calling it quits. It's about an elevator inspector, political ambitions, discrimination and it's also a mystery but the storytelling (and the audio narrator) are so dry and slow that I can't bear to listen to any more of it. I've got too many others in the queue to waste any more time struggling to get into this one.
bookaddict avatar reviewed The Intuitionist on
Futuristic, gritty, odd, but well-written.
reviewed The Intuitionist on + 2 more book reviews
This is one of my favorite books of all time. It is so incredibly well written, it calmly and expertly pulls you into this bizarre alternate universe. Truly fascinating and unique.
maura853 avatar reviewed The Intuitionist on + 542 more book reviews
I wanted to love this: and some elements of it, I did love. The character of Lila Mae. The time-slipperiness quality of the setting: a dreamscape city (clearly based upon, but not quite New York), a time stamp that whirls together fin de siecle opulance and corruption, with the style of 1940s film noir, and the sense, from the 50s and 60s that a cultural dam is about to break, and women and people of color will no longer be held back.

Whitehead does here what he does best -- lush, complicated prose, and gradual layering of vignettes that eventually add up to a story that works on multiple levels. The difference here, compared to The Underground Railroad, is that Lila Mae's love affair with elevators, and the "verticality" that they allow, is a wonderful metaphor, but possibly not strong enough to bear the allegorical weight that Whitehead asks of it.

It is worth remember that this was Whitehead's first published novel. Many would kill their grannies to be as accomplished, so thoughtful and complicated, on their first professional outing. So, yes. I'm grading on a curve. Shows great promise ....
reviewed The Intuitionist on + 25 more book reviews
"Magical...ranks alongside Catch-22, V, The Bluest Eye and other groundbreaking first novels...Whitehead shares Heller's sense of the absurd, Phynchon's operative expansiveness and Morrison's deconstruction of race and racism." SF Chronicle.

Two warring factions in the Dept of Elevator Inspectors in a bustling metropolis vie for dominance: The Empiricists, who go by the book and rigorously check every structural and mechanical detail, and the Intuitionists, whose observational methods involve meditation and instinct. Lila Mae Watson, the city's first black female inspector and a devout Intuitionist with the highest accuracy rate in the dept, is at the center of the turmoil. An elevator in a new municipal building has crashed on Lila Mae's watch, fanning the flames of the Empiricist-Intuitionist feud and compelling Lila Mae to go underground to investigate. As she endeavors to clear her name, she becomes entangled in a web of intrigue that leads her to a secret that will change her life forever.