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From the author of Waiting for the Barbarians and the Booker-Prize-winning Life & Times of Michael K, a dazzling new novel--his first in five years
Disgrace--set in post-apartheid Cape Town and on a remote farm in the Eastern Cape--is deft, lean, quiet, and brutal. A heartbreaking novel about a man and his daughter, Disgrace is a portrait of the new South Africa that is ultimately about grace and love.
At fifty-two Professor David Lurie is divorced, filled with desire but lacking in pas... (show more)
Reviews (411)
No one paints a better picture of the contemporary aging male, who clings to the vestiges of his youth, who refuses to change even as his life crumbles around him. He is an all together despicable character, especially for a woman reader. And I wonder how it is a male, fictional or not, can fail to understand women for so long and still. And I wonder if it is I, after all, who also fails to understand.
If you ever find yourself too happy and need something to bring you back down, this book can do it. I like his writing style but reading two of Coetzee's novels in a row might finish me off along with the hopes and dreams of most of his characters.
my first coetzee novel. finished it, though i didn't really like it. may try some of his other stuff.
Beautifully written, but the story is LACKING...like a bad movie with beautiful cinematography.
Depressing story about a middle aged man in South Africa who resigns his University post after disciplinary charges are brought against him for sleeping with one of his students. In attempting to reach out to his daughter in the aftermath, he is forced to face his weaknesses and re-evaluate his life when they are both violently attacked. This is one of those books one should read in a book club. I would have liked to discuss with others why the author felt the need to lay the main character so low in the process of undestanding himself. It felt excessive.
Very depressing book, I recommend it but only in the proximity of very happy things.
This book made me want to shoot myself in the head with a nail gun. Don't get me wrong. I liked the precise and clipped writing style. It is the story that is highly oppressive and frustrating.









































