The Intuitionist

A Novel

audio cd, 1 pages

Published May 12, 2000 by Recorded Books, Inc. and Blackstone Publishing.

ISBN:
978-1-6644-0973-6
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4 stars (4 reviews)

7 editions

Review of 'Intuitionist' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

Lila Mae Watson is the first Black female elevator inspector ever in the department, she's an Intuitionist who can enter an elevator and "intuit" any defects. She's outnumbered by Empiricists in the department, who are almost all white and male, and eager to blame an Intuitionist when an elevator goes into freefall after Lila Mae's inspection. 

The divide between Empiricists and Intuitionists seems like a simple ideological divide at first, but that central question becomes more complicated as Lila Mae learns more about Intuitionism's founder while investigating the crash. Lila Mae isn't the first Black inspector, and I'm unsure whether she's the first female one, but the combination of the two means that a nearly endless slurry of sexism and racism are directed her way, either singly or in combination. It's consistent but not constant, and whether and how characters disparage her is part of their characterization and contributes to …

Review of 'The Intuitionist' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I give him props for being so ambitious with a first novel, but I struggled with the elevator thing and constantly had to remind myself that it was allegorical of larger and more meaningful tropes. The conceit wore on me and just seemed cute by the end, which I think he recognized with the whole "it started as a joke and then became real to him once it seemed real to others" revelation in the third act. I was in the grocery store a few hours ago and had the thought in the produce section that the book could just as easily have been about the first black "produce arranger," and it would not have lost any of its (unrealized) potential for providing insight into modernity through the prism of race. I also had a hard time seeing Lila Mae as anything other than a cipher for the larger message …