Helpful Score: 2
Absolutely hilarious! A truly snort-your-drink-of-your-choice-through-your-nose type of book. Not to be missed.
Helpful Score: 2
Kingsley Amis' Lucky Jim is a classic. It's one of the first comic send offs of the English style higher academic system, and tells the story of Jim Dixon, a young lecturer at a small British college. Although Jim drinks too much and is somewhat of a cad, he is less annoying that everybody else in the book, and you find yourself rooting for him despite yourself. I felt an obligation to read this book due to its history and the genre it started, but it really wasn't that enjoyable and I don't recommend it unless you appreciate dry British humor and Jane Austen style dialog driven stories. In fact, Lucky Jim is what would have happened if Jane Austin had written The Big U (which I recommend instead).
Literary Quality: 9/10
Enjoyment: 5/10
Literary Quality: 9/10
Enjoyment: 5/10
Helpful Score: 2
Jim is a history professor serving his first year of probationary duty. And, duty it is. As low man on the totem pole, he gets to lecture on merry ole medieval Englanda topic shunned and seriously avoided by the rest of the department. Her you will find all of the stuffiness, smug self-centeredness, egocentric, mind-numbing, sometimes boorish world of academia. I've been there as you can probably tell. Anyway, this book starts out slooooowly but finally picks up some steam when he inveigles himself with some wacky dames and the family of his out-to-lunch department head. Some of it is witty and at any rate it is a pretty good jab at academia.
Helpful Score: 1
I first read this when I was 18, was shocked at how much the "hero" hated so many people with, I thought, so little reason. As I got older I learned that some people just have a low threshold for irritation. The writing is brilliant, original and stunning. Amis scrutinizes his surroundings with a ferocity which reveals local color which no other novelist seems to even notice. His language is succinct, and quite devastating in its savagery.
The book contains some famously hilarious scenes, such as the description of a morning after, and the scene where his hero delivers a lecture drunk. But my favorite is the one where he takes a bus to the train station in hopes of seeing the girl he wants before she leaves town, and every imaginable delay drives him to distraction.
Note: To compare this book to Jane Austen is laughably wide of the mark, Nor is it "dry British humor."
The book contains some famously hilarious scenes, such as the description of a morning after, and the scene where his hero delivers a lecture drunk. But my favorite is the one where he takes a bus to the train station in hopes of seeing the girl he wants before she leaves town, and every imaginable delay drives him to distraction.
Note: To compare this book to Jane Austen is laughably wide of the mark, Nor is it "dry British humor."