

The Collector (Back Bay Books) [Fowles, John] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Collector (Back Bay Books) Review: The Collector: A Psychological Masterpiece With a Commentary on Class Culture - The Collector is a novel by British writer John Fowles. It tells the story of Ferdinand Clegg, a civil servant who lives with his aunt and cousin. When he wins a football pool, he buys a home in a secluded rural location in England, and realizes his desire to meet young art student Miranda. While his aunt and cousin are in Australia visiting relatives, Ferdinand, an avid butterfly collector, adds another beautiful specimen to his collection--by kidnapping Miranda and taking her to his 17th century house. There he will keep her, feed her, battle with her, and finally lose her. The story is cleverly told in three parts. First, we are told the story from Ferdinand's point of view, in retrospect, through paraphrased conversations. In the second part, we read Miranda's diary and discover many things about her personal life, including loves, her feelings about art, relationships and her politics. Finally, we return to Ferdinand, who adds more insight into his relationship with Miranda--its tensions and occasional swings to civility on the young artist's part. The Collector is not just a psychological tale, although that is the overlying characteristic Fowles puts forth through it. It also addresses the clash between classes, through Ferdinand's obstinance and Miranda's frustration--and occasional snobbery towards her captor, whom she nickname's Caliban after the misshapen character from Shakespeare's The Tempest. Furthermore, while we are at times horrified at what Ferdinand ultimately puts Miranda through--the confinement, the forced erotic photos she becomes the subject of, we also find that Miranda too can be cruel and ultimately condescending to Ferdinand. Herein lies the novel's brilliance: a kidnapping and tragedy, but also a multi-dimensional look at the complexity of the human condition and also class divisions--which were a stinging indictment of Britain's social failings at the time. The Collector is an engaging read--at times sensitive and yet ultimately disturbing, but certainly thought-provoking. In so many ways Ferdinand does not seem to be such a horrible man, yet his actions are clearly shocking, and the results simply sad. Having lost his beloved Miranda, he then sets his sights on another young woman. That story remains untold, but clearly adds a bit of a chill to the conclusion. Made into a film in 1965, The Collector remains a great read, even though much of depth of the text is left out by director William Wyler, whose otherwise competent work makes it more than watchable. Still, as always, it's the book that really deserves primary attention, and it works wonderfully on so many levels. For fans of this sort of thickly layered British novel, The Collector is highly recommended. Review: Psychological Thriller - 'The Collector' is about a socially awkward and insecure loner who collects butterflies. He also watches a young college student and becomes fascinated by her. Eventually he abducts her and keeps her locked in his basement. What I found interesting is that the author is VERY good at hinting at The Collector's mental abnormalities. For instance: The Collector sets up the basement to 'pretend' what it would be like if the college student did live down there. (No one having a fantasy is going to build an entire prison cell and go out and spend a lot of money to furnish it - unless he is serious about making that fantasy a reality Yet the character does not even believe that he will actually go through with it). He sits in a van watching her, with chloroform in his pocket, but thinks to himself that he has no plan to actually abduct the girl. The Collector says he 'has' to do things' or that he 'had' to do things; this demonstrates his sickness because there is no need for someone to 'have to' abduct a young woman. He's old-fashioned in some ways and a sadist in others, but he truly believes he is a good person with high morals. The irony! The book has four chapters - alternately narrated by the Collector and then in journal/diary form by his prisoner, Miranda. I found that the chapters narrated by The Collector were fascinating in a disturbing sort of way. The ones narrated by her were drawn out and seem to have a lot of impertinent information - until you realize that the act of journaling is her escape from reality & that she will think and write about anything and anyone to pass the time; then it is brilliant. This was an interesting read, a classic psychological thriller with an ending even more worrisome that the plot itself.
| Best Sellers Rank | #29,770 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #877 in Classic Literature & Fiction #1,329 in Psychological Thrillers (Books) #2,273 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars (3,969) |
| Dimensions | 5.5 x 1.1 x 8.25 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0316290238 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0316290234 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 320 pages |
| Publication date | August 4, 1997 |
| Publisher | Back Bay Books |
T**N
The Collector: A Psychological Masterpiece With a Commentary on Class Culture
The Collector is a novel by British writer John Fowles. It tells the story of Ferdinand Clegg, a civil servant who lives with his aunt and cousin. When he wins a football pool, he buys a home in a secluded rural location in England, and realizes his desire to meet young art student Miranda. While his aunt and cousin are in Australia visiting relatives, Ferdinand, an avid butterfly collector, adds another beautiful specimen to his collection--by kidnapping Miranda and taking her to his 17th century house. There he will keep her, feed her, battle with her, and finally lose her. The story is cleverly told in three parts. First, we are told the story from Ferdinand's point of view, in retrospect, through paraphrased conversations. In the second part, we read Miranda's diary and discover many things about her personal life, including loves, her feelings about art, relationships and her politics. Finally, we return to Ferdinand, who adds more insight into his relationship with Miranda--its tensions and occasional swings to civility on the young artist's part. The Collector is not just a psychological tale, although that is the overlying characteristic Fowles puts forth through it. It also addresses the clash between classes, through Ferdinand's obstinance and Miranda's frustration--and occasional snobbery towards her captor, whom she nickname's Caliban after the misshapen character from Shakespeare's The Tempest. Furthermore, while we are at times horrified at what Ferdinand ultimately puts Miranda through--the confinement, the forced erotic photos she becomes the subject of, we also find that Miranda too can be cruel and ultimately condescending to Ferdinand. Herein lies the novel's brilliance: a kidnapping and tragedy, but also a multi-dimensional look at the complexity of the human condition and also class divisions--which were a stinging indictment of Britain's social failings at the time. The Collector is an engaging read--at times sensitive and yet ultimately disturbing, but certainly thought-provoking. In so many ways Ferdinand does not seem to be such a horrible man, yet his actions are clearly shocking, and the results simply sad. Having lost his beloved Miranda, he then sets his sights on another young woman. That story remains untold, but clearly adds a bit of a chill to the conclusion. Made into a film in 1965, The Collector remains a great read, even though much of depth of the text is left out by director William Wyler, whose otherwise competent work makes it more than watchable. Still, as always, it's the book that really deserves primary attention, and it works wonderfully on so many levels. For fans of this sort of thickly layered British novel, The Collector is highly recommended.
S**S
Psychological Thriller
'The Collector' is about a socially awkward and insecure loner who collects butterflies. He also watches a young college student and becomes fascinated by her. Eventually he abducts her and keeps her locked in his basement. What I found interesting is that the author is VERY good at hinting at The Collector's mental abnormalities. For instance: The Collector sets up the basement to 'pretend' what it would be like if the college student did live down there. (No one having a fantasy is going to build an entire prison cell and go out and spend a lot of money to furnish it - unless he is serious about making that fantasy a reality Yet the character does not even believe that he will actually go through with it). He sits in a van watching her, with chloroform in his pocket, but thinks to himself that he has no plan to actually abduct the girl. The Collector says he 'has' to do things' or that he 'had' to do things; this demonstrates his sickness because there is no need for someone to 'have to' abduct a young woman. He's old-fashioned in some ways and a sadist in others, but he truly believes he is a good person with high morals. The irony! The book has four chapters - alternately narrated by the Collector and then in journal/diary form by his prisoner, Miranda. I found that the chapters narrated by The Collector were fascinating in a disturbing sort of way. The ones narrated by her were drawn out and seem to have a lot of impertinent information - until you realize that the act of journaling is her escape from reality & that she will think and write about anything and anyone to pass the time; then it is brilliant. This was an interesting read, a classic psychological thriller with an ending even more worrisome that the plot itself.
C**N
O Livro The Collector ou O Colecinador tem até filme amei a leitura li bem rápido foi indicad por Tatiana Feltin do Canal Tinny Litle Things meu canal favorito no YouTube
I**L
El libro es perfecto para lo que yo lo necesitaba en el grado de estudios ingleses de la Universidad de Zaragoza y mucho mas barato que la compra habitual.
S**A
I really enjoyed everything about this book, I will definitely read it again one day:) page turner
V**A
La pasta está muy delgadita. Pero muy bien en entrega y todo lo demás
J**.
buono
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