When We Cease to Understand the World

English language

Published Nov. 3, 2020 by Pushkin Press, Limited.

ISBN:
978-1-78227-612-8
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4 stars (21 reviews)

4 editions

An astounding trip through history and the unknown

4 stars

An exceptionally difficult book to rate and review; so much so, I've left it a month before making any comment. I'm not normally much for historical realism in my fiction, but the first story in this often bizarre collection, Prussian Blue, pulled me in hard, and I had to devour it in one satisfying gulp.

Labatut takes historical figures (chiefly from the sciences, with physicists and mathematicians at the forefront), and twists them into often grotesque tales, peppered with fiction and his own invention. The whole book has an addictive and propulsive quality (hence my need to fire through the first story in one sitting), reeling from event to event without hardly catching a breath. Where and with whom one story starts, is in no way guaranteed to end in the same place and with the same person; in a way history itself is the main character here. As Labatut …

Review on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I have mixed feelings about too much fictionalizing recent real people, but at the same time, I'm overwhelmed by how Labatut interweaves historical facts and imagination. It is horrifying to sense the duality that genius scientific discoveries possibly bring to unexpected destruction. It's hard to decide what genre this book fits into (hybrid of non-fiction, essay, and fiction, maybe?)

Review of 'When We Cease to Understand the World' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

What a terrific read! It is a classic theme: the push and pull between opposites (creation and destruction; madness and civilization), but Labutut has breathed new life into the familiar and crafted a fantastic blend of fiction and non-fiction to progress his way through the development of his thinking. I've been recommending this non-stop since I started it. One of those books that certainly stays with you long after reading. My guess is this has to do with the nearly anatomical precision with which Labutut splays his characters' vulnerabilities, and perhaps our own proximity to horror on a massive scale.

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Subjects

  • Romance literature