

desertcart.com: The Quiet American (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition): 9780143039020: Greene, Graham, Stone, Robert: Books Review: A Fascinating Novel About 1950s Vietnam Authored by An Iconic British Author - "The Quiet American" is a really interesting and well written novel. It was authored in the 1950s. It is set in Vietnam in the 1950s during fighting that includes the French and predates official American military involvement. The author, Graham Greene is an iconic British author. The protagonist is a British Journalist. The story involves political intrigue, romance, and some adventure. It is not necessarily a fast pacd novel. It is a very well written story that allows for a lot of contemplation. In retrospect it looks like a warning to America about what the future in Vietnam holds. I took my time reading this novel and found it fascinating. This story is the type of novel that is not always a "light read". It is a thinking person's novel. There is some symbolism. I accessed a copy of Spark Notes on line for free and studied the novel as I read. I read chapters and then studied Spark Notes for that chapter. I am glad that I did so. It added to the experience. However the novel is comprehensible without the additional study. I really liked this novel and am quite glad that i read it. In case it matters I also listened on audiobook and read simultaneously. I am glad that I did both. There were times I re read certain episodes that seemed intellectually deep. This is the kind of novel I read when I have time to concentrate. It was both enjoyable and really worth the effort. Thank You... Review: A hard book to start - After William Boyd mentioned that Bond wished he had his Graham Greene novel with him in Solo, I was keen to read some of his work. After a quick search on desertcart, the Quiet American came up as a popular novel, so I ordered a copy right away I was excited to start the book, but soon found myself struggling with the writing. As much as I wanted to, I just couldn’t get into it. This book was written in 1955, so some of the dialogue and vocabulary is not often used in modern day and I think this was where I was struggling. I persevered on and by about page 50, I was totally hooked. I wanted to understand more about Aiden Pyle, his infatuation for Phuong and what he was really doing in Vietnam. The story is great and I can understand why this potentially would be one of the novels read by Ian Flemming’s Bond. I sailed through the pages and needed a few days afterwards to reflect on it all, which to me is a sign of a great read. The story telling, coupled with the whitty dialogue and a great non predictable plot was like nothing I’ve read in a long time. I wholeheartedly recommend reading this book, just be prepared for a slightly tough read at first and you will be rewarded for sticking it out.
| Best Sellers Rank | #23,554 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #188 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction #388 in Classic Literature & Fiction #848 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (8,837) |
| Dimensions | 5.71 x 0.55 x 8.35 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0143039024 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0143039020 |
| Item Weight | 8.4 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 208 pages |
| Publication date | August 31, 2004 |
| Publisher | Penguin Classics |
F**Y
A Fascinating Novel About 1950s Vietnam Authored by An Iconic British Author
"The Quiet American" is a really interesting and well written novel. It was authored in the 1950s. It is set in Vietnam in the 1950s during fighting that includes the French and predates official American military involvement. The author, Graham Greene is an iconic British author. The protagonist is a British Journalist. The story involves political intrigue, romance, and some adventure. It is not necessarily a fast pacd novel. It is a very well written story that allows for a lot of contemplation. In retrospect it looks like a warning to America about what the future in Vietnam holds. I took my time reading this novel and found it fascinating. This story is the type of novel that is not always a "light read". It is a thinking person's novel. There is some symbolism. I accessed a copy of Spark Notes on line for free and studied the novel as I read. I read chapters and then studied Spark Notes for that chapter. I am glad that I did so. It added to the experience. However the novel is comprehensible without the additional study. I really liked this novel and am quite glad that i read it. In case it matters I also listened on audiobook and read simultaneously. I am glad that I did both. There were times I re read certain episodes that seemed intellectually deep. This is the kind of novel I read when I have time to concentrate. It was both enjoyable and really worth the effort. Thank You...
K**M
A hard book to start
After William Boyd mentioned that Bond wished he had his Graham Greene novel with him in Solo, I was keen to read some of his work. After a quick search on Amazon, the Quiet American came up as a popular novel, so I ordered a copy right away I was excited to start the book, but soon found myself struggling with the writing. As much as I wanted to, I just couldn’t get into it. This book was written in 1955, so some of the dialogue and vocabulary is not often used in modern day and I think this was where I was struggling. I persevered on and by about page 50, I was totally hooked. I wanted to understand more about Aiden Pyle, his infatuation for Phuong and what he was really doing in Vietnam. The story is great and I can understand why this potentially would be one of the novels read by Ian Flemming’s Bond. I sailed through the pages and needed a few days afterwards to reflect on it all, which to me is a sign of a great read. The story telling, coupled with the whitty dialogue and a great non predictable plot was like nothing I’ve read in a long time. I wholeheartedly recommend reading this book, just be prepared for a slightly tough read at first and you will be rewarded for sticking it out.
D**H
"No one has had better motives for all the trouble he caused"
Published in 1955, this book by acclaimed author Graham Greene is remarkably prescient. In this account, a jaded British newspaperman has spent years covering the resistance to French colonization in Vietnam. While he has a wife back in England, he has been in a long term relationship with a local Vietnamese woman for years. Then one day a seemingly bright though innocent American shows up, saying he's there to help the Vietnamese people. It soon becomes clear that though this American Pyle had presented himself as a humanitarian, in actuality, he is with American intelligence (it's unclear if the initials CIA were well known in 1955 as they are today; they are never mentioned here). The journalist, Fowler, comes across evidence that Pyle is equipping Vietnamese rebels with material to construct bombs. Fowler confronts him about this, and Pyle's true feelings about the people he is there to "help" become clear. He sees them as children who need the helping hand of the white man to make sure they don't go down wayward paths, for example, by choosing Communism. Things eventually come to a head in dramatic fashion, and one can see how many already thought that Western meddling in these locals was a path to hell. This book is justifiably a classic, and the trope about the "Quiet American" who arrives with the best of intentions and little else is brilliantly introduced by Greene in this book. This book will appeal to fans of classic literature, the Cold War era, or traditional spy fiction.
A**R
The Quiet American
The setting Vietnam near the end of the French occupation. A middle age English correspondent languishes in the sultry climate having as his companion a beautiful young Vietnamese girl. At this point in his life she and his nightly opium pipes are his only preoccupations. He befriends a young American secret agent disguised as a member of an aide agency. The American falls in love with the English man’s mistress. This eventually leads to his demise at the hands of the Vietminh who are assisted by the English man’s mistress.
T**E
Uneven edges of pages
The edges of the book pages are not evenly cut. Binding is tight. overall the quality of the book is ok.
R**L
I Did Not See That One Coming
Set in the days before the U.S. involvement in Vietnam, this story kept me interested to the last page. The American idealism, the French bitter colonialism, and the British disengagement interplay in this story where life and death, love and lust, come at the most random moments. “There ain’t no good guys. There ain’t no bad guys. There’s only you and me and we just disagree.”
W**M
Good sense of humour. The book transports you back in time to the 1950s Saigon under French control. He writes about things that give you clues of what really happened there.
G**!
This book is quietly stunning. Littered with glimpses and literary visions of beauty and thoughts of powerful effect, this work of written art will move and entertain the reader in ways unseen for generations. By the end of chapter one, we learn that the American in question (Mr Pyle) is found dead with mud in his lungs under the bridge to Dakow. The one true friend of the deceased - who is also the tale's narrator - is questioned by the local police who speak in an almost incomprehensible combination of French / Vietnamese. He is soon released after identifying the body but even that scene, despite its macabre overtones was hugely entertaining and had strong elements of suspense. Pyle's local girlfriend is compelling in her silence. I look forward to learning more of her (as do the local police, I imagine). So, is the book a whodunit, then? You will have to read it yourself to find out. But is certainly a classic. It is a book for the ages. It is populated by truth, love, vulgarity and brings home the horrors of war and the effect it has on the human condition. I was going to borrow this book from my local library. I weakened at the last minute and purchased it for my e-reader. It has turned out to be the best eleven dollars I have spent for ages. Graham Greene was a genius and has demonstrated his full understanding of what it means to be human. BFN Greggorio!
ジ**田
早川書房から翻訳が出ていますが、原文を(Kindleの力を借りて)読むほうがはるかに堪能できます。単なるアメリカ批判でなく英国の病いも織り込み、深みのある重層的な構造を持った物語になっています。この主人公を「おれ」と訳すのはどうでしょう。「私」としたほうがグリーンの文体に忠実なように思われます。東南アジアの戦乱と、深く入り込んだ欧米との抜き差しならない関係を背景に、ぬぐいきれない白人の病理も、アジア理解の限界も、様々含めての秀作と評価します。
P**N
This book has the flavor of slow cooking. Immensely readable and page turningly good. Greene is the master of the understatement and has a gift for observation leaving the enthralled reader comment after savorful comment. The book, unintentionally, helps make sense of geo politics in the modern age. The more things change the more they remain the same.
L**O
Historically interesting, but novelistically poor.
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