EVERYONE Has Read This but Me - The Catch-Up Book Club discussion

A Clockwork Orange
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CLASSICS READS > A Clockwork Orange - *SPOILER*

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Kaseadillla | 1373 comments Mod
Hello all - starting up discussions for the JULY 2017 BOTMs. This discussion is for the group's poll selection for the CLASSICS category: A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess.

This discussion will be FULL OF SPOILERS. If you haven't read the book and don't want to ruin the ending, head on over to the spoiler-free discussion HERE .

Happy reading!
Kasey


Tania (geoluhread) Growing up in a household that speaks Russian, we invented words that are a mesh of Russian and Arabic. When we couldn't remember the Arabic word for example, we would say the Russian one, and conjugate it with Arabic grammar, and vice versa.

Reading this book was no different, the odd language was mainly Russian, so it flowed seamlessly, it was only odd in the first few pages to have to get used to retrieving my Russian vocabulary while reading an English-written book (as English is not my first language).

I truly loved this book. It tickled my dystopian bone. Especially the final chapter, which was strangely omitted from the movie. I think the entire book revolves around the idea delivered in the final chapter, the movie just lost that so it was deeply flawed.


Morgan Ashcraft | 1 comments The introduction in my book mentioned how the original American edition didn't include the 21st chapter. Likewise, it said that Stanley Kubrick's movie ended with Alex being cured, (I haven't seen the movie, so correct me if I'm wrong) forgoing Burgess's conclusion. I thought the last chapter added much more depth to the story. What did you guys think?


message 4: by Sarah (last edited Jul 07, 2017 07:21PM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Sarah | 342 comments Morgan wrote: "The introduction in my book mentioned how the original American edition didn't include the 21st chapter. Likewise, it said that Stanley Kubrick's movie ended with Alex being cured, (I haven't seen ..."

I read this ages ago so I don't remember a whole lot, but I remember being really irritated when I found out that the American version had the original ending removed. Supposedly the US publisher felt that we (the American audience) would prefer a darker ending. Fortunately I was still in college at the time and my university had a copy of the English version.

I believe I remember hearing that Stanley Kubrick was not initially aware of this change to the American version. When he found out, he opted not to change the movie because they were too far along in the process.


Kandice Burgess divided the book up into 21 chapters very deliberately because 21 is so often the perceived age of absolute maturity. Leaving out that last chapter and overlooking the importance of the chapter number really changes the ideas of the book.

I think this book is absolute genius and leaving out the last chapter takes so much of that away. Even without it, though, the Nasdat allows the reader to remove themselves a bit from the violence. Enough, at least, to keep reading. First time through, you are concentrating so hard on understanding the slang, that by the time you realize how incredibly violent a scene is, you can't stop. I'm not squeamish, but I bet some readers who are finished because of this tact.


Ieva Upeniece (notesofabookdragon) Tania wrote: "Growing up in a household that speaks Russian, we invented words that are a mesh of Russian and Arabic. When we couldn't remember the Arabic word for example, we would say the Russian one, and conj..."

Luckily, I had the same. Since I know Russian, it was way much easier for me. I can only guess, how hard it must be for those who are not acquainted with Russian.


J.P. Nicks | 5 comments I just finished this one! About 40% of the way through the book, I was pretty sure I was going to hate it. The slang and language was easy enough to get used to but 7 long chapters of Alex committing "ultra-violence" got so boring. It picked up very quickly after that and I found myself enjoying the rest of it quite a bit. I grew to almost sympathize with Alex and enjoyed the social commentary that came in the last half of the novel.


Sarah | 728 comments Done! I was basically going to write exactly what Kandice wrote.

It's crazy how an added or missing chapter can completely change a book! When I read this as a teenager, it was the version without the 21st chapter. Without it, I do love "I was cured all right." as a closing line. But the 21st chapter definitely gave the book a lot more meaning.

And I agree that Nadsat speak padded the violence in the book and made it an easier read. This would have been very difficult to get through if it hadn't been written in such a fun way that creates a puzzle for the reader as they go along trying to decode the message. I also felt the language really helped build and connect with Alex's character. I enjoyed little things like Minister of Interior Inferior turning into Int Inf Min and then into Intinfmin.

This book is intimidating in the first chapter, but once you get rolling it's amazing! 5 stars for sure!


Markus | 14 comments I can only agree with what has been said already. I came to love the Nadsat slang and the more characters around Alex spoke in a normal way, the more exclusive I felt. Like being one of the droogs. This all peaking in him meeting his old friend at the end, who stopped speaking Nadsat completely.

I had only seen the movie, where the last chapter wasn't adapted. I adore the film but i'm really glad that I read a version with the 21'st chapter because it added a deeper and more coming-of-age kind of vibe.

You could write a whole book about the moral/ethical questions in the novel. But I like to think of it as a rebellious, idealistic piece of writing, you know. The old: Think for yourselves! Emancipate yourselves! Still a very current topic.

Loved it.


message 10: by Jen (last edited Jul 17, 2017 10:36AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Jen Lewis | 18 comments In the forward Anthony Burgess mentioned that this was not his favorite work, despite it being what he will be remembered for. Does anyone know which was his favorite?


Kaseadillla | 1373 comments Mod
Agree with Kandice in that I think the language helps you be removed from the violence. I think it would have been a much different effect reading it in plain English.

Overall, really enjoyed this book. Great ideas, well written, and clever. I can't help but think that a lot of dystopian cliches spun out from this book - ex. in the show Lost when the scientists on the island are doing experiments on some people by forcing them to watch weird videos strapped in chairs injected with whatever... straight from the book.


Matthew (fogjuice) Seeing all this discussion about the last chapter made me jump ahead. Apparently I have one which is missing it. Last chapter is chapter 6 in part 3 and ends as the movie does, with "I was cured all right." This is a very old, 1965 edition of the book. 60¢ cover price from Ballantine. The cover art doesn't fit at all. Looks like 50's greasers kind of gang, even on a motorcycle. It also has a Nadsat dictionary in the back. I take it not all editions do?
When I'm done with it, I'll have to run by the library and see if they have an edition with the last chapter.


Carol  V (vanhookc) Matthew wrote: "Seeing all this discussion about the last chapter made me jump ahead. Apparently I have one which is missing it. Last chapter is chapter 6 in part 3 and ends as the movie does, with "I was cured al..."
Yes indeed, you will have to get a hold of the last chapter!

I am in part three of the book today, and it seems so odd as I watch on the news that O.J. Simpson will soon be released back into society. He has had his training courses, quite different from Alex's therapy, but yet society is hoping for the same results of rehabilitation for both Alex and O.J.


sarah m ☽₊‧⁺˖⋆ I enjoyed this book, but all the violence in the beginning was definitely too much for me. I just don't like reading about rape and everything, even if it's serves a purpose in the book, so it was really hard to get through those parts. When I started this book I only imagined the main character being a thief - I had no idea the book would be so brutal, and I don't really think the language completely helped cover it all up.


Sarah | 728 comments The only part that was hard for me to handle was when he took the 10 year old girls to his place. I was disgusted, for sure. I know he was younger at the time, but not THAT young and it's hard to think about that happening to anyone but especially someone so young.


sarah m ☽₊‧⁺˖⋆ I completely agree about the 10 year olds being the most horrifying part. I almost stopped reading it there, but I heard it was an interesting philosophical book so I tried to push through. Thank goodness the violence kinda died down as the book went on!


aPriL does feral sometimes  (cheshirescratch) | 689 comments I read this without Chapter twenty-one in the 1970's, and I saw the movie at that time. This time I bought the eBook from Amazon, and it had an explanatory introduction by Burgess along with Chapter twenty-one.

Burgess, raised Catholic, says he was disgusted by the idea of being programmed to being good - he is horrified by Aversion Therapy - but he apparently completely ignores the rituals of his religion insofar as it continuously indoctrinates it's adherents through rituals - but he also says he loved living the life of ultraviolence through his characters. Aversion Therapy is and was a real thing, btw.

However, I also read an explanatory article by Burgess printed in The New Yorker, where he suggests one of his reasons for the book was to pay bills so he needed a novel that would sell. Apparently it was not truly in his mind to be writing the Great British Novel. But he adored the part of Catholic doctrine which emphasizes free will to choose being good or evil. He dislikes very much that some Protestant faiths imply God has already determined our futures and fates, including who will be fated to go to heaven or hell, indicating we are born already destined to be evil or good by God. This idea of God choosing everyone's fate beforehand repulsed him more than a person choosing to do evil.

Youth culture is also satirized along the way, along with false piety (politicians), liberalism, scholars and police work.

Personally, I find myself literally split mentally over this book. Abstractly, I see the book club discussion questions immediately: about the value of being Good if it is socially enforced or chosen for you, and that Evil is a matter of childish immaturity.

The one thing that is not much analyzed are the victims. I am no fan of those who play victimization games all their lives for personal gain. But utterly ignored in the professional and classroom commentary, analysis and literary abstract ideas is the fact Alex raped two ten-year-olds girls, and he and three other 'teens' viciously raped a young wife in front of her husband, driving him mad and killing the woman somehow, as well as knowingly murdering a female senior citizen in her own home after breaking in, along with beating up other seniors. Alex terrorizes his own parents, being bigger and stronger than them at age 15.

Yet, it is the victimization of Alex which is recognized and made right in the novel by giving him a well-paid job, so that age 19 he is thinking of impregnating a woman (by force, for all we know) and making a son of his own.

Frankly, although the author says he actually thinks Free Will is more important than being good or evil and this was the true moral of his story, and that he actually believes Evil is a matter of childish immaturity, to me, he only made a good case for using Aversion Therapy. Chapter twenty-one only proved to me that charismatic psychopaths who are getting bored of gangbanging are permitted to move on peaceably due to the rampant political corruption in society.

Either way whether one takes in the Disney ending of Chapter twenty-one or the more real American version since it is absolutely clear Alex is a psychopathic serial killer, sexual predator, animal abuser (maybe) and child rapist, as well as the inventive leader of murderous gangbangers, I wonder that most of us must find the author's presentation of Alex such an attractive protagonist, we blithely skip off into the tangent fields of abstract philosophies and ignore what Alex is - someone who rapes ten year olds and rapes and murders women. For many of us, we see Chapter twenty-one as the redemption of Alex, which the author meant us to feel.

I believe no one in the real world who knows an Alex (I did) would ever go on and on blathering about the larger picture of the social and moral implications of locking up someone who committed the crimes Alex did in sympathetic terms of his immaturity, or whether he had a right to choose Good or Evil instead of being molded by Aversion Therapy (parental guidance and support doesn't count here).

I see the fun of the book's supposed philosophical arguments about immaturity and Free Will, but I am also completely dismayed, disgusted, frightened, horrified, and generally enraged by most everyone accepting Alex's redemption in Chapter twenty-one, ignoring he is still a fricking animal who raped children and killed people without ever looking back or feeling ANY guilt.

Am I the only one who is noticing how fricking twisted the author's Grand Philosophical arguments are given his murderous sexual predator psychopathic anti-hero?

People are wondrously misdirected by beautiful words over action, aren't we?


message 18: by Kristin B. (last edited Jul 21, 2017 10:42AM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

Kristin B. Bodreau (krissy22247) | -2 comments aPriL does feral sometimes wrote: "I read this without Chapter twenty-one in the 1970's, and I saw the movie at that time. This time I bought the eBook from Amazon, and it had an explanatory introduction by Burgess along with Chapte..."

Ditto everything here!

I would have preferred the book end at chapter 20. A psycho is still a psycho and I can happily think he will eventually get what's coming to him. The last chapter horrified me.

All I could think about it poor Pete's wife. This young woman has no idea that she married a violent thug and rapist. Speaking of, why wasn't he ever punished? Alex told the police all about the break in and rape of that woman. The police would have known that this woman died. Why was everyone not rounded up and punished for rape and manslaughter? They were so keen to punish these youths, where was the punishment here?

I was also raised Catholic, and let me tell you, aversion therapy and external forces that require goodness without free will is built right in. I get the whole "There is evil in the world because God gives us Free Will stuff." But there is a lot in the Catholic faith basically saying be good or else. For people who really believe, the threat of an eternal fiery damnation keeps them from doing bad more than their own desire to be good. I'm an atheist now and I have respect for people of faith. I don't mean to denigrate the faithful. Not all of them anyway. But honestly, not sure how much devout religion really differs from aversion therapy sometimes.

My copy had a bunch of extra content. I skipped it all. This book bugged me so much I just wanted to be done with it. I generally hate skipping stuff, but I just had to in this case.

The whole idea that this horrible person is allowed to grow up and be part of society without really paying his debt enrages me. He doesn't stop being violent because he is suddenly good. He does it because he's bored. And he expects his son to grow up and be like him as a teenager. So he's totally cool with having a kid who rapes, beats and murders people. And what happens when Alex is bored with a nice normal life?

I have a nine year old and he gets punished when he does something wrong. And we discuss the fact that when he grows up, if he does things wrong he will have to face the consequences. So he has to take his consequences now so that when he gets older he shows some restraint. Because for him being in trouble means that I take away his tablet and tv. But as an adult it could mean getting fired from his job or going to jail. He knows that he has to become a functioning part of society as an adult and that means not just doing whatever you want, even if you are young.

I feel like my nine year old understands morality far better than Burgess.

Look at what this story teaches youth. It's cool if you're shitty now, you'll grow up and it will all be fine. You'll grow out of it and we'll just let your youthful transgressions go. Because hey, kids are just being kids. ARGH.

Ok. Sorry. Rant over.

TL:DR this book made me mad and should probably never be read by teenagers.


aPriL does feral sometimes  (cheshirescratch) | 689 comments Kristin wrote: "aPriL does feral sometimes wrote: "I read this without Chapter twenty-one in the 1970's, and I saw the movie at that time. This time I bought the eBook from Amazon, and it had an explanatory introd..."

I, for one, am totally ok with rants, Kristan! I found chapter twenty-one enraging!


Carol  V (vanhookc) To end the book at C. 20 seems to leave Alex watching battles between political thoughts and communities, and questioning theories of living in an utopian world. Alex is infatuated by cult glammor and power. It's a violent world, but hey, it is what it is, thinks Alex, so the story goes. And in a world of evil and corruption, one has to take care of self, thinks Alex. He's cynical but feels healed through his recent experiences when his old self returns in his mind.

Add back the last chapter... This is a coming-of-age story, concluding with the passing of youth. Teens feel wise but do make mistakes. It is hopeful that they learn from their mistakes, don't harm other life, and have many watchful eyes along the way to provide proper guidance and safety. This is the way it has been throughout time. This is the way it will be for future generations, as the author suggests. We do our best to teach and protect our children. As they pass beyond youth to adulthood- at age 18-19-or 21, as the author suggests, new chapters in life await and hopefully productive citizens have blossomed from youthful experiences.

Alex enjoyed ultraviolence. This is unnatural for teens. Alex did not learn from his horrid mistakes. The story didn't prove justice served and proper rehabilitation. In a real world, Alex's criminal nature would have led him to be be tried as an adult. Didn't three die from his actions? Was justice served? Could this be why Anthony Burgess didn't think this was his best work?


message 21: by KayRisTin (last edited Jul 22, 2017 04:15PM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

KayRisTin Huff The good features of this book, for me, were that it was fast-paced, creative, and thought-provoking.

What I didn't like is, for me, the story (and main character) did not completely convey what the author intended. I get that it's very philosophical and the whole characterization of youth versus maturity thing. However, Alex does not represent anything near a typical teenager and his thoughts at the end are not, to me, signs of true change or maturity. (I guess Burgess had to go pretty extreme to sell books - shock entertainment sells.)

Yes, teenagers can be self-centered and will do stupid things (I have 2 teenagers; I also taught/coached teenagers for 13 years.), but Alex seems to be the embodiment of Freud's "id." While it might be typical to see this in a very, very young child, it is not typical for a teenager. Alex is a person who sees only his own needs and wants, sees nothing wrong with getting them (regardless of what it takes, who it hurts), people around him (including his parents, friends) are pawns for helping him get what he wants, others should be sympathetic to him but he is not toward them. These are characterizations (or symptoms) of something other than simply being young.

Suddenly, because he's the ripe-old age of 19 ;), he's cured from the ails and angst of youth. Then, he runs into one of his old "droogs" - they reminisce about their crimes as if they were just toilet-papering schools/houses or playing harmless pranks. There is no evidence of remorse or how their actions affected people's lives (evidence of true maturity) - thoughts even young children are capable of. Now he wants to have a child? Scary!

I'm glad I read it rather than not. Also, I'm glad to have read the full book (with Ch. 21), but it does present an interesting question of how it changes the story and what readers actually prefer.


Laura (laurapainter) | 36 comments While it was a compelling read, I'd have no desire to watch the movie version. I agree with the above comments. What I would add, is that his attitude in the last chapter seemed consistent with his parents. He never seemed to be taught consequences early in life. His parents just let him do whatever he wanted as a 15 yr old and he blamed everyone else for the outcome. So it kind of made sense that Alex would be the same kind of parent. Sad really.


Sarah | 728 comments I hear everything everyone is saying, but we have to remember that this is a dystopian novel about a world where teenage gangs rule the world. It's supposed to be shocking and horrific and the adults in the world are scared of these teenagers and this is basically the norm of the time the book is set in meaning everyone is conditioned to it, so the lack of punishment and all of the remorse we wish to see is not something prominent in this dystopian setting. I loved the book for what it was, even if it isn't something I would agree with morally or in our current time.


message 24: by [deleted user] (new)

aPriL does feral sometimes wrote: "I read this without Chapter twenty-one in the 1970's, and I saw the movie at that time. This time I bought the eBook from Amazon, and it had an explanatory introduction by Burgess along with Chapte..."

Thanks so much, aPriL, you just saved me plenty of time reading and commenting :)


message 25: by [deleted user] (new)

Thanks Sarah for putting my thoughts into words.
I agree this novel is set in a dystopian future so you can't view it with the morals that we hold today.
I was captivated by this novel and soon got used to the nadsat language used by Alex.
I think the book was about free will and the right to use it even in a criminal way.
I think the last chapter was more a realisation by Alex that he would only have as much influence on his children as his parents had on him.
Isn't this the case in the world we live in today?


Zainab Al Lawati (zainaballawati) | 224 comments I really disliked the book. Yes, eventually I got used to the Nadsat, but I am not sure why did I have to at the first time? I am not a big fan of learning a new set of vocab that adds nothing to me neither now nor in future.

Also, it was too gruesome to me. I know you guys mentioned that the Nadsat helped in making a distance between the violence and the reader, but that wasn't the case. I could picture everything and it gave me shivers, especially the rapes. And the Nadsat made it worse as I was guessing some words depending on the context and I always expected the worse.

I started enjoying it slightly when he was finally in jail, but soon after that, I was not interested at all. Apparently, this book is not for everyone, and it definitely wasn't for me.

I took more than a month to complete a 200 pages book.


Leesa Just finished. That was the toughest book I've ever read and there was at least three times that I put it down and swore I wasn't picking it back up. The violence was shocking to read for me and I only started enjoying it when he went to jail. Then, for me it picked up and I became interested.
I gather why people love it and why it's such a controversial book/film. I however read for pleasure and to relax both during and after a hard day and this novel was neither pleasurable nor relaxing. I'm glad to be finished!


Sarah | 728 comments You did it! At least now you know what's up with the book and have a little trivia knowledge under your belt! Trying to find a bright side for ya :P


Leesa Haha thanks Sarah! I am proud that I didn't have to create a 'did not finish' shelf for it.... Silver linings!


Laura H L (laurah30) | 648 comments I finally finished this book and I have mixed feelings about it. I listened to the audiobook which was amazing to listen to. The narrator gave Alex an authentic voice and it helped me to understand the language better.

When i think of when this book came out and how much of it still applies today - it is mind boggling. Senseless violence! Lack of empathy for others - it's chilling. Yet it kept me engrossed as difficult as it was to listen to.

I didn't feel any sympathy for Alex. How could i? He had no empathy for anyone but himself. He was an outrageously evil and grandiose character. I felt sorry for everyone who got in his sights. The police were not likeable but I find this is often the theme in these books; their behaviour mirrors the criminals they are dealing with.

It is a classic and I am glad I read it but I may have some nightmares as a result.


Kerri | 711 comments I'm glad to see I was not the only one who found the ending lacking. Yeah, it's supposed to show a "people change" attitude and have a brighter future ahead, and it is a lot less bleak and chilling than ending it at the 20th chapter. But as others said, I found his lack of remorse unsettling. And maybe Burgess was trying to show that that remorse would come in time, but I didn't really see it. So I feel that Alex did not get what he "deserved" and I didn't see that he learned much of anything from his experiences. He still wanted what he wanted without much regard for anyone else, but his desires had simply changed.

I did find the social commentary amazing though, and all the plays for power throughout the entire book. Between Alex and his "droogs", the different gangs, the police, the guy doing the brainwashing and the governement, the people against the government and the governement, etc. and all the ways they tried to use Alex and others as pawns. That was my favorite thing about this book: the show of all of the subtle and obvious ways people try to grab and hold on to power.

I am also glad that I learned Russian once upon a time (it is very, very rusty now as I haven't used it in over 10 years) because that did help with the Nasdat, which I found annoying but also fascinating. I read that Burgess thought this was a cowardly way of writing, hiding behind the slang in a way, but I thought it really helped give a grounding to the story and show a different world.


Charley Girl (charleygirl9) | 88 comments It is just a freaky read. The futuristic world of the narrator, Alex, is eerie. The criminal activities and attitudes are frightening and I though Alex and is friends were much older until he is incarcerated and he states he is 15 years old. The way that the state intends to fix Alex is more frightening than the criminal activities.

I felt a bit icky after finishing this book but I continual to think about it. It was like 1985 only scarier.


Hannah (titchhx) | 80 comments I found this difficult to read, especially to start with, as the way that it is written feels very disjointed and the content quite difficult! However, after a little while, from a psychology point of view it was very interesting and posed a lot of moral questions about choice and the behavioural approach to psychology/behaviour.


Martina Bučková | 145 comments I read this book just a few weeks ago and I am still a bit shocked by it. The meaning of Clockwork Orange is interesting I never thought of it how all people were controlled in each aspect of their life by Government.
Also a very gripping scene was where the author himself appeared in the house and his wife was raped and died afterwards, this is quite uncommon in the books I would say but if it is really based on something from his real life then it makes sense.

Btw. I liked the last chapter which was skipped from US version, although it makes it look like being violent when you are young is fine cause you will outgrow it. Because it's only a stage in your life. 🤔


Kylie Stoneburner (lunchbox89) | 197 comments I listened to an audiobook version with the added foreword from the author, and the “controversial” last chapter.

Starting straight away, this book throws you into a made up “Nadsat” language, described as a slang language all the teens use such as Alex and his droogs. I felt very lost at first. Since I was listening to the book, I opened an online Nadsat vocab page and tried to flip back and forth between these unknown words as it was being narrated. I did this for probably the first chapter, which did help, and then the rest I tried to just figure out from context like if I was thrown into any new language.

In my opinion, this quirky language was the only novelty of the book. In the greatest sense, it made the experience participatory; in the least, it required the reader’s undivided attention in order to comprehend the content. The slang also served to censor the explicit nature of the story and its scenes of brutality, rape, and murder. Real bezoomny veshches. If Anthony Burgess had written this story in plain English, I don’t think I would have continued past Part 1.

So, I’m not sure what the big deal was all about regarding the last chapter, originally left out in the US edition. At the end of the 20th chapter, Alex is “cured” and realizes he can be violent again without getting sick over it; able to itty on living his jeezny like a skitebird again. This is where the story ends in the original US edition, and in Stanley Kubrick’s film adaptation. In the 21st chapter, Alex starts to have thoughts about settling down and having a son of his own. Burgess’s stance being that everyone can change, and to deny that would turn an organic being into a mechanism. As in the letter to the reader in the foreword of this edition, Burgess says, “when a man ceases to have free will, they are no longer a man. Just a clockwork orange, a shiny, appealing object, but just a toy to be wound-up by either God or the Devil, or (what is increasingly replacing both) the State”. It seemed to me that Alex only started to “reform” because he was getting bored with the same old antics; not because he had any moral realization that his actions were wrong. This is evident when he imagines his son following in his violent ways once he’s of the same Nadsat age, and just chalking up the idea as if boys will be boys. It serves the excuse that violence and brutality is acceptable when you’re young, because you grow out of it, right?

All in all, this book was a real horrorshow; but not in the Nadsat sense of the word.


aPriL does feral sometimes  (cheshirescratch) | 689 comments Without the last chapter, the book reads like a cynical snarky political expose. Psychopaths get away with murder, politicians use whoever for yet another political puppet show while the usual farce of pretending to care about normal ordinary people while secretly making sure the wealthy and their investments are safe.

When the novel was published in the US, we baby boomers were angry as hell. We were in high school and college (which was affordable). The Vietnam War was happening. We baby boomers were being drafted (not voluntary). It came out the war was really about taking over Vietnam’s oil fields, not saving Vietnam for democracy. Women were angry at being restricted to housework and raising children, with no control over their own money (legally, all men, father brother husband, had all control over women’s money and bank accounts), and black people were forming organizations to protest redlining, being shut out of jobs and good schools.

The meme of my generation was “don’t trust ANYONE over thirty.”

The way this book read to us was the fix was in against decency fairness and equality. Merit didn’t matter - who you know in the White Male 1% is what counts, Ordinary people are commodities to be used killed sold like chess pieces to make money and power for the elite. Evil psychopaths are a diamond gold mine for the 1%.

That is how these twenty chapters read to baby boomers and Kubrick- it fit the narrative of the American youth revolution of the time.

The twenty-first chapter, which most Americans had no clue existed, changed the entire book into something else - that even psychopaths can be redeemed. The author believed psychopathy could be cured by maturity. Clearly he was a young idiot. The book was still a political novel, but not a biting satire as my generation believed. It was instead a religious tract! of redemption. Also, the author did not think redemption mattered unless freely chosen - free will. So he thought ANY evil should be redeemable no matter what if the Evil doing stopped. The author apparently did not care how evil a person was as long as Free Will was involved.

So, there are several dimensions going on with this novel.


message 37: by RJ - Slayer of Trolls (last edited Nov 16, 2019 05:56PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

RJ - Slayer of Trolls (hawk5391yahoocom) I read the book with the final chapter, which was missing from American versions prior to 1986. As an aside, I believe the missing chapter was published in Rolling Stone magazine in the mid 1980s, which I subscribed to at the time, and I believe I read it prior to reading the book or even seeing the movie. Now that I've done both, I find that the missing chapter rings false to me. Although it does complete Alex's character arc of redemption and growth, it also fails to convince a reader that a person who is capable of committing such evil acts is capable of turning such a completely new leaf just because he has a couple of birthdays. Had Alex's criminal acts been scaled back to beating up a bum, fighting other gangs and maybe some vandalism and/or petty theft we might believe it. But Alex's acts of violence and rape were just too violent, not something casually entered into or casually left behind. So the ending doesn't quite fit, and I can see why it was cut. Stanley Kubrick, the noted director who filmed the movie version, wasn't much for happy endings either, and although he may have based the shooting script on the American version of the book (note: although Kubrick was American by birth, he lived in England from 1961 until his death which encompasses the period during which he filmed A Clockwork Orange) I find it interesting that he described that missing chapter as an "extra chapter," which makes me think he didn't think too much of it. Kubrick almost certainly would have preferred an edgier film, one that left the audience uncertain, and lo and behold that's what he produced. (Kubrick later banned his own film version from cinematic release after he became fearful of copycat violence.)

I did enjoy the book quite a lot, however. The theme of freedom of individual choice is explored in an obvious fashion, and the idea of the suppression of the individual for the betterment of society echoes Orwell's 1984, the mother of all dystopias. I didn't bother to look up any of the nadsat slang terms, and I found that by reading through the book I could understand Alex's narration through context. It was after I finished the book that I learned that much of the slang vocabulary was based on Russian, which has some interesting Cold War-era implications.

A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
Rating: 4 stars
Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 38: by Betsy (last edited Nov 17, 2019 10:14AM) (new)

Betsy | 930 comments There are definitely many themes this novel brings up to discuss: free will, redemption, crime and violence, age, politics, gender etc.
Can, and should, anyone be redeemed?
What does this book say about the times we're living in now?
Could you relate to Alex, or did you feel the point was to be an observer, a witness to his crimes?

But what about the way the book was written?
I found the language Nadsat an interesting premise but poor execution, mainly because it was so tiresome to keep researching what the terms were.

There is a lot of fertile discussion on that last, or deleted, chapter. I also agree that it changes the meaning of the book dramatically, and Kubrick was right to leave it out of the film adaptation.


message 39: by Johanna (last edited Nov 17, 2019 01:09PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Johanna | 18 comments Am I the only one who didn't view the last chapter as a "he outgrew his ultraviolence" thing, but rather as a nod towards the fact that people will not change until they choose to? It was very banal and almost anticlimactic.. like, "roses are red, violets are blue.. today Alex decides to be good. The End". Alex has not actually changed, he is still selfish and only thinking about what he wants.. just that what he wants is a family now. Not once in the entire book did he actually express remorse for his prior actions. It felt very intentional, as opposed to a rushed coming-of-age character arc, in my opinion. I personally loved it. it drove the point home.

I really loved the atmosphere in this book. It was written during the Cold War so with the Russian slang and the housing blocks they live in that depict people working it makes me wonder if Burgess was exploring some kind of Soviet victory era world.

Also, completely agree with the person who said that the language completely veils the graphic depictions of violence, and makes them much more manageable. So much so, that I actually found some parts of this book quite funny (not the violent bits obviously, but just some of the conversations and the way Alex described certain things and events).


aPriL does feral sometimes  (cheshirescratch) | 689 comments I think Alex is a psychopath. Full stop. He stopped because he was bored. Not because of maturity or redemption. He has not changed. I think he will grab a girl, rape her and hope for a kid, being who he is.


Renee (elenarenee) This book fascinated me. The book seemed to me to be a lot about a persons right to choose.

I almost wonder if the behavior were something other then violence if the book would have been better I know that sounds odd But right now we are living in a world where we are trying to correct the wrong of non inclusion. The fear and hatred of certain people seems to fuel this country. We see laws made to make it easier for the LBGTQ community. But these laws don't change whats in peoples minds. I know it would be a different book but I would read it too,

This book book was creepy but very thought provoking


message 42: by Betsy (new)

Betsy | 930 comments Johanna, that's interesting. Thank you for bringing this point, I never saw it like that.

Can you describe a bit more what you mean, Renee?


message 43: by Betsy (last edited Nov 26, 2019 06:23AM) (new)

Betsy | 930 comments Let's take the novel and place it in this era, where violent games are so prevalent. Do you think the violent, nadsat-speaking modern youth would be better or worse off with RPGs (role-playing games)?
In what ways could RPGs influence their behaviour positively or negatively?


message 44: by aPriL does feral sometimes (last edited Nov 25, 2019 11:28AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

aPriL does feral sometimes  (cheshirescratch) | 689 comments Betsy wrote: "Let's take the novel and place it in this era, where violent games are so prevalent. Do you think the violent, nadsat-speaking modern youth be better or worse off with RPGs (role-playing games)?
In..."


Worse.

In regards to natural born killers like Alex:

"The FBI estimates that there are between twenty-five and fifty serial killers operating throughout the U.S. at any given time. If there are fifty, then each one is responsible for an average of three murders per year. Serial killers are always present in society."

"Their understanding of right and wrong does nothing to impede their crimes, however, because psychopaths such as Gacy and Rader have an overwhelming desire and compulsion to kill that causes them to ignore the criminal law with impunity."

Oct 24, 2014"

5 Myths about Serial Killers and Why They Persist [Excerpt ...
https://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...

so, I think RPGs, video games, would not keep these guys home, but maybe it would stimulate them emotionally and creatively, feed their desire to go out to kill. They have twists in those brains. Most don't spill their guts but they love spilling other people's guts. Some do talk and explain they want to see people hurt and scream before they avidly take a look at people's inner selves, literally. Remember Jeffrey Dahmer?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey...

Of course, not all psychopaths have this kind of twist. More are presidents of countries and businesses:

https://www.forbes.com/sites/victorli...

They have ALWAYS been with us, video games, RPGs or not:

"By comparison, the incidence of psychopathy in prison populations is estimated at around 15%."


message 45: by Betsy (new)

Betsy | 930 comments I studied Criminology at secondary school (don't ask) and we learnt that there are no studies (yet) that show a link between watching violent movies and participating in violent acts. Correlation does not mean causation.
But I can see that it may stimulate already 'born' killers like Alex, those predisposed by psychopathy to harm others for fun.


message 46: by Kim (new) - rated it 2 stars

Kim | 17 comments Wow, this was a let-down for me. I had high expectations going in, but I did not like reading this. Here’s my review

Kandice wrote: "... the Nasdat allows the reader to remove themselves a bit from the violence. Enough, at least, to keep reading. First time through, you are concentrating so hard on understanding the slang, that by the time you realize how incredibly violent a scene is, you can't stop."

I didn’t have much trouble with the language. I’m used to deducing the meaning of words I don’t know from their context as I mostly read in English and that’s not my native language, and I learned the new vocabulary quickly. But I agree it helps create a distance between the narrator and the reader because when someone’s speech is very different from your own, it makes it harder to identify with that person, even if you understand him or her perfectly (unfortunately, this is also true in current society).

aPriL does feral sometimes wrote: "Abstractly, I see the book club discussion questions immediately: about the value of being Good if it is socially enforced or chosen for you, and that Evil is a matter of childish immaturity. "
The book makes quite a strong case that being good because it is enforced on you has no real value. But the real question is, what constitutes it being enforced on you? The case in the book is quite obvious: through a torturous method it is made so that the person is physically incapable of committing evil, or even dwelling on evil thoughts for too long. But what about ‘enforcing’ through the threat of damnation and punishment in the afterlife? What about ‘enforcing’ through the threat of heavy punishment in this life (death sentence, lifelong incarceration, corporeal punishment)? How far can a society go to make sure its members behave according to generally accepted values? Should Free Choice be held above all? Is there a way to teach people the values necessary to live together peacefully any other way than through ‘enforcing’ them?

Sarah wrote: "It's crazy how an added or missing chapter can completely change a book! When I read this as a teenager, it was the version without the 21st chapter. Without it, I do love "I was cured all right." as a closing line. But the 21st chapter definitely gave the book a lot more meaning."

I am not a fan of the last chapter and agree with the publishers who decided the book had a much stronger ending without it. I get that Burgess was trying to end the book on a more positive note, with the hope that people can be ‘cured’ from being evil on their own. He didn’t want the book coming full circle and everything that happened in between being completely in vain.
I have two problems with that:
First of all, I just don’t believe in that ending. I do think most people who committed crimes can be redeemed, but a crucial part of that is admission of guilt and honest remorse. Throughout the book Alex never ever feels remorse. When reading the bible, he doesn’t pick up any of the teachings of Jesus, he imagines himself to be the Roman who hammers in the nails. When seeing a beautiful woman, he doesn’t imagine making love to her, he imagines rape. After his treatment, he doesn’t behave non-violent because he feels that is what is right, but because he doesn’t want to be sick. He has all the makings of a psychopath, and although he may be bored with the life of an ultra-violent teen terrorising the neighbourhood with his droogs every night, and he may long to procreate (note he doesn’t mention love anywhere, just having a child), I’m quite sure that does not mean he has lost his violent nature. I wouldn’t want to be his future wife or child…
The second problem is he gives his own answer to the interesting questions he raised earlier (and it’s an answer I don’t agree with). He suggests that being evil is a passing thing, something that will go away on its own when people grow older and more mature. In that case there is no need for a society to enforce its values, people will set themselves right eventually.
I think the book is much stronger with the questions that have been raised unanswered and up for discussion, than with an answer included that can easily be dismissed as naive and faulty.


Renee wrote: "This book fascinated me. The book seemed to me to be a lot about a person’s right to choose.
I almost wonder if the behavior were something other then violence if the book would have been better"

That is indeed an interesting way of looking at it from another angle. In all the discussions about this book everyone agrees on one thing: Alex’s actions are bad, and he needs to change.
But what if the behaviour he was ‘cured’ from was something else than violence, something that people are not so unanimous about whether it is bad or not? What if, for example, he was ‘cured’ by Aversion Therapy from loving another man instead of a woman? What if, in his ‘crime’, there is no choice involved, and the therapy just makes his life miserable for something he doesn’t have any control over?

Betsy wrote: "Let's take the novel and place it in this era, where violent games are so prevalent. Do you think the violent, nadsat-speaking modern youth be better or worse off with RPGs (role-playing games)?"
I personally really don’t think it makes a lot of difference. Most youths are perfectly capable of separating reality and fiction. The same arguments about violent games stimulating those with violent inclinations to go out and act on their impulses have been made before about violence in movies, on Tv, in certain music genres, and even books. No study has ever been able to prove a clear correlation between violence in pop culture and a rise in violent crimes.


message 47: by Sian (new) - added it

Sian | 2 comments At first I thought I didn’t like it but by Part 2 the story got more interesting and I understood the language more. I’m not sure if you’re meant to feel bad for Alex in the end but I had a hard time empathising with him considering what he’d done before being arrested. I didn’t realise they removed a chapter. Glad I picked up the full copy. I wonder why they did that?


Johanna | 18 comments Sian wrote: "At first I thought I didn’t like it but by Part 2 the story got more interesting and I understood the language more. I’m not sure if you’re meant to feel bad for Alex in the end but I had a hard ti..."
I also couldn't figure out if we were meant to feel bad for him.. however overall I feel like the book is more more about the question of goodness vs. evil being a choice.


Johanna | 18 comments Betsy wrote: "Let's take the novel and place it in this era, where violent games are so prevalent. Do you think the violent, nadsat-speaking modern youth would be better or worse off with RPGs (role-playing game..."

I don't believe that violent RPGs play a role in violent behavior, whatsoever, and as far as I know, there are no studies that show a correlation between the two.


Kristen I really grew to appreciate this book but I thought about tossing it aside during Part 1 and not finishing it. I’m glad I stuck it out though because I started to understand the language better and now feel like I’m part of a secret society of people who understand nadsat. This book will stick with me for awhile, partly because it’s such a departure from my usual genres.


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A Clockwork Orange (other topics)
A Clockwork Orange (other topics)

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Anthony Burgess (other topics)
Anthony Burgess (other topics)