Two men - Jay and Ben - sit in a Washington hotel room. Jay has called his old friend Ben there - to tell him why and how he wants to kill the President. Jay is a bit of a loser (he's lost his girlfriend, his job, his car), generally easy-going, but now he's on edge and he's angry - and he's acquired some radio-controlled flying saws, and is working on a boulder with a depleted uranium centre- but he also has a gun and bullets. Ben is the voice of liberal reason, with a job and a family. Jay switches on a tape machine, and the two men argue. Well, Ben tries feebly to reason or cajole, while Jay rants and rages about everything from the horror of what happened at that southern Iraq checkpoint where US forces opened fire on a Shiite family in a Land Rover, killing most of them, and decapitating two young girls; to the iniquities of the present administration, Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld et al., and abortion (if they're against abortion, how come they can kill women and children?), not to mention the napalm-like substance ('improved fire jelly') used in bombs in Iraq. Their dialogue veers from chilling and serious to wacky and crazed (Bush, says Jay, is 'one dead armadillo'). Checkpoint is a novel about a man pushed to the extremes, by a writer who is clearly angry. Like Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11, it takes the temperature of America just below the surface and finds it at boiling point.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
A quick, stripped cry of a book. . . . As timely as fiction gets. Lorrie Moore, "New York Review of Books" Provocative . . . incendiary . . . a great work. Rick Moody, " The Believer" A meditation on action . . . [Baker] analyses the details of daily life with a surgeon s precision. "The Economist" If one of our supreme chroniclers of mild manners can be roused to such patriotic indignation, democracy yet has a fighting chance. " Voice Literary Supplement" A ripped-from-the-headlines docudrama for the printed page, a timely and tense screed for a divided country hurtling toward who knows where. "Associated Press" Checkpoint is about limits of presidential power, of law, of discourse, of rationality, and of language itself. "Boston Phoenix" Compelling . . . a passionate cry from the heart. "USA Today" What makes Baker original is his minute obsessiveness and his willingness to entertain inappropriate subjects. . . "Checkpoint "takes Baker s obsessiveness and inappropriateness into the public realm. " Newsweek" An astonishing, uncomfortable conversation. Baker has a real ear for the cadence and wryness of the modern intelligentsia. "Portland Oregonian" Baker's new novel checks its inhibitions at the door . . . entertaining, edgy and unpredictable." "Las Vegas City Life" Sly, slender but important . . . Baker excels at writing about those facets of the human experience we prefer to hide. "San Francisco Chronicle" This novel could be a kind of record of our times. . . . Its goal is to take [the] internal combustion process of hatred and anger and make it visible which Baker does brilliantly. "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette" On the whole, Baker improves upon Samuel Beckett's [Godot]. Baker's jokes will make people, rather than theatre majors, laugh. "Los Angeles Times" "Checkpoint" is like a hornet: It s small, quiet, with a sinister aspect to its midday peregrinations, and it has a stinger: conscience. "Toronto Globe and Mail" I confess to finding Nicholson Baker s prose so witty and hypnotic that I never want it to stop. "Washington Post" Baker writes like no one else in America. "Newsweek" Baker [is] one of our most gifted and original writers. "Seattle Times" Enthusiast, obsessive, visionary, engineer of the everyday there s nobody quite like Baker in the literary universe. "Newsday" [Baker s] prose is so luminescent and so precise it manually recalibrates our brains. "Time""
"A quick, stripped cry of a book. . . . As timely as fiction gets." -Lorrie Moore, New York Review of Books"Provocative . . . incendiary . . . a great work." -Rick Moody, The Believer "A meditation on action . . . [Baker] analyses the details of daily life with a surgeon's precision." -The Economist"If one of our supreme chroniclers of mild manners can be roused to such patriotic indignation, democracy yet has a fighting chance." -Voice Literary Supplement "A ripped-from-the-headlines docudrama for the printed page, a timely and tense screed for a divided country hurtling toward who knows where." -Associated Press"Checkpoint is about limits-of presidential power, of law, of discourse, of rationality, and of language itself." -Boston Phoenix"Compelling . . . a passionate cry from the heart." -USA Today"What makes Baker original is his minute obsessiveness and his willingness to entertain inappropriate subjects. . . Checkpoint takes Baker's obsessiveness and inappropriateness into the public realm." -Newsweek "An astonishing, uncomfortable conversation. Baker has a real ear for the cadence and wryness of the modern intelligentsia." -Portland Oregonian"Baker's new novel checks its inhibitions at the door . . . entertaining, edgy and unpredictable." -Las Vegas City Life"Sly, slender but important . . . Baker excels at writing about those facets of the human experience we prefer to hide." -San Francisco Chronicle"This novel could be a kind of record of our times. . . . Its goal is to take [the] internal combustion process of hatred and anger and make it visible-which Baker does brilliantly." -Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"On the whole, Baker improves upon Samuel Beckett's [Godot]. Baker's jokes will make people, rather than theatre majors, laugh." -Los Angeles Times"Checkpoint is like a hornet: It's small, quiet, with a sinister aspect to its midday peregrinations, and it has a stinger: conscience." -Toronto Globe and Mail"I confess to finding Nicholson Baker's prose so witty and hypnotic that I never want it to stop." -Washington Post"Baker writes like no one else in America." -Newsweek"Baker [is] one of our most gifted and original writers." -Seattle Times"Enthusiast, obsessive, visionary, engineer of the everyday-there's nobody quite like Baker in the literary universe." -Newsday"[Baker's] prose is so luminescent and so precise it manually recalibrates our brains." -Time
-A quick, stripped cry of a book. . . . As timely as fiction gets.- -Lorrie Moore, New York Review of Books-Provocative . . . incendiary . . . a great work.- -Rick Moody, The Believer -A meditation on action . . . [Baker] analyses the details of daily life with a surgeon's precision.- -The Economist-If one of our supreme chroniclers of mild manners can be roused to such patriotic indignation, democracy yet has a fighting chance.- -Voice Literary Supplement -A ripped-from-the-headlines docudrama for the printed page, a timely and tense screed for a divided country hurtling toward who knows where.- -Associated Press-Checkpoint is about limits-of presidential power, of law, of discourse, of rationality, and of language itself.- -Boston Phoenix-Compelling . . . a passionate cry from the heart.- -USA Today-What makes Baker original is his minute obsessiveness and his willingness to entertain inappropriate subjects. . . Checkpoint takes Baker's obsessiveness and inappropriateness into the public realm.- -Newsweek -An astonishing, uncomfortable conversation. Baker has a real ear for the cadence and wryness of the modern intelligentsia.- -Portland Oregonian-Baker's new novel checks its inhibitions at the door . . . entertaining, edgy and unpredictable.- -Las Vegas City Life-Sly, slender but important . . . Baker excels at writing about those facets of the human experience we prefer to hide.- -San Francisco Chronicle-This novel could be a kind of record of our times. . . . Its goal is to take [the] internal combustion process of hatred and anger and make it visible-which Baker does brilliantly.- -Pittsburgh Post-Gazette-On the whole, Baker improves upon Samuel Beckett's [Godot]. Baker's jokes will make people, rather than theatre majors, laugh.- -Los Angeles Times-Checkpoint is like a hornet: It's small, quiet, with a sinister aspect to its midday peregrinations, and it has a stinger: conscience.- -Toronto Globe and Mail-I confess to finding Nicholson Baker's prose so witty and hypnotic that I never want it to stop.- -Washington Post-Baker writes like no one else in America.- -Newsweek-Baker [is] one of our most gifted and original writers.- -Seattle Times-Enthusiast, obsessive, visionary, engineer of the everyday-there's nobody quite like Baker in the literary universe.- -Newsday-[Baker's] prose is so luminescent and so precise it manually recalibrates our brains.- -Time
An incendiary firecracker of a novel about a man who wants to assassinate President Bush.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
Seller: medimops, Berlin, Germany
Condition: very good. Gut/Very good: Buch bzw. Schutzumschlag mit wenigen Gebrauchsspuren an Einband, Schutzumschlag oder Seiten. / Describes a book or dust jacket that does show some signs of wear on either the binding, dust jacket or pages. Seller Inventory # M03498006428-V
Seller: butzle, Buttenwiesen, DE, Germany
Taschenbuch. Condition: Sehr gut. 1. Auflage. 140 S. B3276-103 3498006428 Sprache: Deutsch. Seller Inventory # 59953
Seller: Gerald Wollermann, Bad Vilbel, Germany
Gebundene Ausgabe. Condition: Gut. 1. 144 S. Taschenbuchausgabe. Innerhalb Deutschlands Versand je nach Größe/Gewicht als Großbrief bzw. Bücher- und Warensendung mit der Post oder per DHL. Rechnung mit MwSt.-Ausweis liegt jeder Lieferung bei. Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 190. Seller Inventory # 1116585
Seller: Wolfgang Rüger, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
DEA, 140 S., OKart., sehr gut erhalten Aufgrund der EPR-Regelung kann in folgende Länder KEIN Versand mehr erfolgen: Bulgarien, Finnland, Frankreich, Griechenland, Luxemburg, Österreich, Polen, Rumänien, Schweden, Slowakei, Spanien. Seller Inventory # 59145AB
Seller: Butterfly Books GmbH & Co. KG, Herzebrock-Clarholz, Germany
Taschenbuch oder Softcover. Condition: Gut. 1. Auflage. Zustand: Mängelexemplar, SEHR GUTER Zustand! HC1-008-6/8-00171352 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 193. Seller Inventory # 12380
Seller: Butterfly Books GmbH & Co. KG, Herzebrock-Clarholz, Germany
Softcover. Condition: Sehr gut. 144 Seiten Zwei Freunde treffen sich in einem Hotelzimmer in Washington. Es entspinnt sich ein Gespräch über ein geplantes Attentat auf den Präsidenten, das politisch und moralisch extreme Fragen aufwirft. Zustand: Einband mit geringfügigen Gebrauchsspuren, insgesamt SEHR GUTER Zustand! HC1-852-5/8-00400904 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 190. Seller Inventory # 387426
Seller: Butterfly Books GmbH & Co. KG, Herzebrock-Clarholz, Germany
Softcover. Condition: Sehr gut. 144 Seiten Zwei Freunde treffen sich in einem Hotelzimmer in Washington, wo einer von ihnen ein Attentat auf den Präsidenten plant. Zustand: Einband mit geringfügigen Gebrauchsspuren, insgesamt SEHR GUTER Zustand! HC1-463-4/8-00834268 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 192. Seller Inventory # 420274
Seller: Butterfly Books GmbH & Co. KG, Herzebrock-Clarholz, Germany
Softcover. Condition: Sehr gut. 144 Seiten Zwei Freunde diskutieren in einem Hotelzimmer in Washington über ein Vorhaben von enormer Konsequenz. Ein politisch-extremer Roman, der Symptomatik und Machtverhältnisse in Amerika hinterfragt. Zustand: Einband mit geringfügigen Gebrauchsspuren, insgesamt SEHR GUTER Zustand! HC1-099-4/8-00834281 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 193. Seller Inventory # 420298
Seller: Leserstrahl (Preise inkl. MwSt.), Oldenbüttel, Germany
Taschenbuch. Condition: Wie neu. 1. Mängelexemplar, ungelesen---Ein Dialog zwischen zwei Männern. Einer, Jay, will Präsident Bush ermorden, und erklärt in einem Hotezimmer in Washington seinem Freund Bill, warum. Er ist, man merkt es schon bald, geistig nicht gesund. Und dennoch hat er sehr gute Argumente für die beabsichtigte Tat. Wie es mit Jay und Bush endet, bleibt offen. Roman. nein. Seller Inventory # 5972
Seller: BOUQUINIST, München, BY, Germany
Illustrierte Klappenbroschur. Condition: Sehr gut. Deutsche Erstausgabe. 140 Seiten. 21 cm. Sehr guter Zustand. Seit den Reaktionen von George Bush auf die Terroranschläge vom 11. September 2001 in New York machen die Intellektuellen Amerikas künstlerisch und dokumentarisch Jagd auf den US-Präsidenten und seine Maßnahmen zur Beschneidung der Demokratie und der Menschenrechte. Der Sprachwissenschaftler und Kulturkritiker Noam Chomsky etwa warf Bush in seinem Essay Power and Terror vor, mit der Rhetorik des "heiligen Krieges" aus einer Position der Selbstgefälligkeit heraus bewusst Völkerrecht zu brechen. Die unkonventionellen Attacken von Michael Moore sind sattsam bekannt. Nun macht auch der amerikanische Schriftsteller Nicholson Baker (Vox, Zimmertemperatur ) gegen die Bush-Regierung Front. Und er tut es auf äußerst raffinierte, da literarische und ironisch gebrochene Art und Weise. Zwei Freunde treffen sich in einem Zimmer des Adele Hotel in Washington D.C. Jay hat seinen Freund Ben angerufen, um ihm mitzuteilen, dass er George W. Bush ermorden will -- mit verschiedenen Geheimwaffen: zum Beispiel mit einer fliegenden Kreissäge ("ultrascharf, absolut tödlich") oder mit einem Klumpen abgereichertem Uran, der alles zermahlen kann. Schon bald wird klar, dass Jay ein überspannter Spinner ist -- ein Bewusstseinszustand, der seine Rede immer wieder in Frage stellt. Aber eigentlich hat er ganz vernünftige Argumente für seinen übertriebenen Hass. Und so kann man in Checkpoint eine ganze Menge lernen über die amerikanische Mentalität, über Selbstgefälligkeit, politische Verlogenheit und das Verhältnis von Wirtschaft und Macht. Das literarische Verfahren erlaubt es Baker, schweres Geschütz aufzufahren. Schließlich kann er seinen Kritikern immer entgegenhalten, nicht er selbst hätte Bush einen "nicht gewählten betrunkenen Ölmann" genannt, sondern sein verrückter Held. "Roman" hat Baker sein Buch genannt, aber eigentlich ist es ein als Theaterdialog getarntes, überraschend originelles und ästhetisch ansprechendes Pamphlet gegen Bushs Politik. Und es ist vor allem eins: es ist brillant geschrieben. -- Thomas Köster. Pressestimmen: A quick, stripped cry of a book. . . . As timely as fiction gets. Lorrie Moore, New York Review of BooksProvocative . . . incendiary . . . a great work. Rick Moody, The Believer A meditation on action . . . [Baker] analyses the details of daily life with a surgeons precision. The EconomistIf one of our supreme chroniclers of mild manners can be roused to such patriotic indignation, democracy yet has a fighting chance. Voice Literary Supplement A ripped-from-the-headlines docudrama for the printed page, a timely and tense screed for a divided country hurtling toward who knows where. Associated PressCheckpoint is about limitsof presidential power, of law, of discourse, of rationality, and of language itself. Boston PhoenixCompelling . . . a passionate cry from the heart. USA TodayWhat makes Baker original is his minute obsessiveness and his willingness to entertain inappropriate subjects. . . Checkpoint takes Bakers obsessiveness and inappropriateness into the public realm. Newsweek An astonishing, uncomfortable conversation. Baker has a real ear for the cadence and wryness of the modern intelligentsia. Portland OregonianBaker's new novel checks its inhibitions at the door . . . entertaining, edgy and unpredictable." Las Vegas City LifeSly, slender but important . . . Baker excels at writing about those facets of the human experience we prefer to hide. San Francisco ChronicleThis novel could be a kind of record of our times. . . . Its goal is to take [the] internal combustion process of hatred and anger and make it visiblewhich Baker does brilliantly. Pittsburgh Post-GazetteOn the whole, Baker improves upon Samuel Beckett's [Godot]. Baker's jokes will make people, rather than theatre majors, laugh. Los Angeles TimesCheckpoint is like a hornet: Its small, quiet, with a sinister aspect to its midday peregrinations, and it has a stinger: conscience. Toronto Globe and MailI confess to find. Seller Inventory # 52801