· Platform by Michel Houellebecq Heinemann, pp, £ Michel Houellebecq is the first French novelist since Albert Camus to find a wide readership outside www.doorway.ruted Reading Time: 6 mins. · Platform by Michel Houellebecq Heinemann £, pp Most contemporary novels are distinctly forgettable. They are as permanent as clouds. But the Estimated Reading Time: 6 mins. But Platform does not contain an "idea" to keep a mayfly awake at night, and Houellebecq is no more a novelist of ideas than Benny Hill. At best, Platform might reinforce Michel Houellebecq's position as the talismanic idiot-savant of the emasculated literary www.doorway.ru: Michel Houellebecq.
Platform | Chapter 2 of 44 Author: Michel Houellebecq | Submitted by: Maria Garcia | Views | Add a Review Please hit next button if you encounter an empty page. Platform PDF book by Michel Houellebecq Read Online or Free Download in ePUB, PDF or MOBI eBooks. Published in August 24th the book become immediate popular and critical acclaim in fiction, cultural books. Suggested PDF: The Possibility of an Island pdf. My homemade trailer of Michel Houellebecq's thrilling novel "Platform".
In his novel "Platform", French writer Michel Houellebecq deals with themes that are dear to him. The contemporary man e his relation to sex, love and existence are at the center of the narrative that has globalization as its background. Actually what is behind the narrative is a little bit more complicated that just plain the world going global. Platform (French: Plateforme) is a novel by French writer Michel Houellebecq (translated into English by Frank Wynne). It has received both great praise and great criticism, most notably for the novel's apparent condoning of sex tourism and Islamophobia. The murderer is the brother of his young lover Aicha. Michel now begins to confront the latent desperation that he carries within him. Beyond questions of plot construction and literary technique, Platform is a scathing and sincere look at the architecture of meaninglessness in the modern world. To his credit, when Houellebecq contrasts reality in first world countries with their third-world counterparts he does not evoke the false sentimentality of the ideologue.
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