Red Pill

A novel

Hardcover, 304 pages

Published Sept. 1, 2020 by Knopf.

ISBN:
978-0-451-49371-2
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4 stars (13 reviews)

After receiving a prestigious writing fellowship in Germany, the narrator of Red Pill arrives in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee and struggles to accomplish anything at all. Instead of working on the book he has proposed to write, he takes long walks and binge-watches Blue Lives--a violent cop show that becomes weirdly compelling in its bleak, Darwinian view of life--and soon begins to wonder if his writing has any value at all.

Wannsee is a place full of ghosts: Across the lake, the narrator can see the villa where the Nazis planned the Final Solution, and in his walks he passes the grave of the Romantic writer Heinrich von Kleist, who killed himself after deciding that "no happiness was possible here on earth." When some friends drag him to a party where he meets Anton, the creator of Blue Lives, the narrator begins to believe that the two of them …

4 editions

Review of 'Red Pill' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

The journey of a liberal academic family-man into the nebulous ideas of the alt-right, which in a subtle way portrays those ideas as a form of insanity. This is actually the most insightful thing I've read about the alt-right and its quasi-fascism, and it mirrors a lot of the existential unease that I think a lot of people felt after 2016.

Kunzru also writes incredible prose and the story is as bizarre as it is enjoyable, with a strangely satisfying ending.