Move over, 007: a stunning, sexy - and decidedly female - new player has entered the world of international espionage armed with her own pocket survival kit, her Rules for Living, her infamous overactive imagination, and a very special underwire bra.
How could a girl not be drawn to the alluring, powerful Pierre Ferramo - he of the hooded eyes, impeccable taste, unimaginable wealth, exotic international homes, and dubious French accent? Could Ferramo really be a major terrorist bent on the Western world's destruction, hiding behind a smoke screen of fine wines, yachts, and actresses slash models? Or is it all just a product of Olivia Joules's overactive imagination?
Considering the number of writers who've tried, and generally failed, to do plummy Bridget Jones one better, it only makes sense that Fielding should take a vacation from the genre she spawned and seek (sort of) greener pastures. Her new inspiration? Think Ian Fleming. Fielding's ridiculous, delicious, wildly improbable plot goes something like this: freelance journalist Olivia Joules ("as in the unit of kinetic energy"), formerly Rachel Pixley (her whole family got run over when she was 14), gets bumped from the Sunday Times's international coverage down to the style pages thanks to the titular imagination (e.g., a story about a "cloud of giant, fanged locusts pancaking down on Ethiopia"). In between ducking twittering PR reps and airheaded blondes at a Miami face cream launch party, she uncovers what looks like an al-Qaeda plot, headed by a dreamy Osama bin Laden look-alike, who is either (1) a terrorist, (2) an international playboy, (3) a serial killer or (4) all of the above. Languid, mysterious Pierre Feramo returns Olivia's interest, and thus begins an around-the-world adventure that has plucky Olivia eventually recruited by MI6. In addition to the fun spy gear (e.g., Chloé shades fitted with a nerve-agent dagger) there are kidnappings, bomb plots and scuba-diving disasters. Olivia is slim, confident and accomplished; ostensibly, she's "painstakingly erased all womanly urges to question her shape, looks, role in life," etc. But she still has her bumbling Jonesian moments, and though she may not need a man, she'll get one in the end. What's wrong with the book: two-dimensional characters, dangling plot threads, the questionable taste of al-Qaeda bombings in an escapist, comic spy novel. What's right: girl-power punch, page-turning brio and a new heroine to root for.
Olivia Joules wants to be a foreign correspondent for the SUNDAY TIMES, but her overactive imagination gets her demoted to the lifestyle pages. While in Miami covering the launch of a skin cream created by the alluring Pierre Ferramo, she witnesses the destruction of a floating apartment complex at the hands of al Qaeda. Olivia is recruited as a CIA/MI6 agent--with weapons in her underwire bra, a GPS earring, and a pocket survival kit-- to pursue the terrorists. Josephine Bailey creates distinctive voices for loony Olivia, the faux-French Ferramo, and the many other characters. Bailey's witty voice is perfect for the ludicrous moments--of which there are many--but less fitting for the occasional serious ones--for example, when Olivia is rescuing residents from the sinking apartments. Fielding's fault perhaps, but mildly jarring all the same. A.B.
Critics uniformly admire Fielding’s wit; reviews for Olivia Joules acknowledge that her punch lines uncoil with deft precision and real insight. Some praise her for branching out of the more standard chick-lit genre she helped launch with Bridget Jones to create the kicky, modern spy-girl, Olivia (or, as the Los Angeles Times calls her, “Janey Bond”). No one, however, thinks Olivia Joules’ bin Laden plot line is funny. Several writers complain that mentions of al Qaeda yank the reader out of the story back into reality, almost as if someone had inserted snuff footage into Bambi. The third-person voice distances the reader as well. Fielding can find solace, though, in knowing that most regard this as a misstep and are eager to see what her imagination concocts next.
More than anything, freelance journalist Olivia Joules wants to write serious news stories, but because of her "vivid" imagination, Olivia instead finds herself relegated by her editors to the style section. While in Miami covering the launch of a new face cream, Olivia meets mysterious, sexy Pierre Feramo, the scientist responsible for developing the cream, and once again Olivia's imagination takes over. Is Pierre really a cosmetics-developing, movie-producing international playboy or could he be an al-Qaeda agent in disguise? Olivia, who knows a thing or two about changing one's identity, can't decide if her suspicions about Pierre are correct or merely a product of her fertile imagination. What is even worse is that if Olivia turns out to be right about Pierre, it means she might be falling in love with a terrorist! The author of the phenomenally popular Bridget Jones's Diary (1998) gifts readers with another endearing, irrepressible heroine, who, armed with her lists and survival kit, discovers in this deliciously fun novel that she has a natural talent for spying. Fielding's latest has all the ingredients of a good thriller--exotic locales, a resourceful heroine, intrigue, and a touch of sexy romance--but the book is also electric with Fielding's wry wit, and the combination is simply delightful.
John Charles
Helen Fielding, a journalist and a novelist, is the author of three previous novels, Bridget Jones’s Diary, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, and Cause Celeb. She also co-wrote the screenplays for the movie of Bridget Jones’s Diary and the forthcoming sequel based on Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason.
length: (cm)22.1 width:(cm)14.8
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从文学技巧的角度来看,这本书的语言风格展现出了一种罕见的、融合了古典韵味与现代节奏感的独特美学。它绝非那种为了炫技而堆砌华丽辞藻的作品,而是每一个词汇的选择都服务于烘托氛围或推进叙事。譬如,作者在描绘某些特定场景时,会突然切换到一种近乎诗歌的、画面感极强的笔触,与主体叙事的快速、简洁形成鲜明对比,这种跳跃产生的张力极具感染力。更值得称道的是,对环境的描写——无论是喧嚣的都市街景,还是幽静隐秘的场所——都饱含着强烈的象征意义,环境不再是背景板,而是成为了推动情节发展的隐形力量。这种高超的文字驾驭能力,使得阅读体验不仅仅是信息传递,更是一种纯粹的审美享受,仿佛在欣赏一幅精心打磨的立体油画。
评分这本书的叙事节奏简直让人欲罢不能,作者似乎对如何精确地把握故事的张弛有着一种近乎本能的直觉。从故事伊始,主角就陷入了一种令人不安的境地,那种被卷入事件漩涡的无助感通过细腻的心理描写,丝丝缕缕地渗透进读者的心底。尤其赞赏的是,那些看似无关紧要的日常琐事,在情节的推进中,都被巧妙地编织成了解开谜团的关键线索。这种对细节的极致打磨,使得整个故事的逻辑链条异常坚固,每当我觉得自己能预测下一步发展时,作者总能用一个意想不到的转折将我拉回现实,让我不得不重新审视之前的一切判断。它不是那种靠着突兀的爆炸场面来制造刺激的作品,而是更偏向于一种缓慢但持续的、渗透性的紧张感。读者仿佛成为了一个与主角并肩作战的侦探,在蛛丝马迹中摸索前行,那种最终豁然开朗的满足感,是阅读体验中最为珍贵的馈赠。这种高密度的信息处理和情绪调动,使得阅读过程本身成为了一种高度集中的智力活动。
评分我得说,这部作品在人物塑造上的大胆和深刻,是近年来我接触到的文学作品中少有的。那些配角,即便是只出场寥寥数次,他们的形象也立体得仿佛随时会从书页里走出来。作者对于人性的复杂层面有着极其敏锐的洞察力,没有将任何角色简单地划分为“好”与“坏”,每个人物都有其自身的灰色地带、合理的动机和不可言说的秘密。特别是主角的内心挣扎,那种在理想与现实、道德与生存之间的摇摆不定,被刻画得淋漓尽致。我甚至能体会到她每一次艰难抉择背后的沉重呼吸声。这种对角色内部冲突的细致解剖,让故事超越了单纯的悬念或冒险,触及到了更深层次的存在主义困境。读完之后,我发现自己仍在回味某些角色的某一句台词,思考他们做出那样选择的原因,这说明作者成功地在读者心中植入了持久的思考锚点。
评分真正让我感到惊喜的是,故事在探讨宏大主题时,处理得非常克制和巧妙。它似乎在不经意间触及了关于记忆的本质、集体潜意识的运作,甚至是对权力结构的一种微妙反思,但它从未以说教的姿态出现。作者更倾向于通过情节的具象化来引发读者的思考,让读者自己去拼凑出那些隐藏在表层事件之下的深层含义。这种“留白”的处理方式,极大地扩展了作品的解释空间,不同背景的读者可能会从中解读出截然不同的侧重点。我喜欢这种不把话说满的写作态度,它给予了读者足够的智力参与度,让每一次重读都有可能发现新的维度。这种在娱乐性故事外壳下,包裹着哲学思辨的结构,无疑是成熟和高级的标志。
评分如果用一个词来形容这本书给我的整体感受,那会是“结构精巧”。故事的骨架搭建得极其稳固,即便是加入了多重叙事视角和时间线上的跳跃,也丝毫没有让人感到混乱。相反,正是这些看似错综复杂的设计,最终汇集成一股强大的合力,将所有的线索精准地导向终点。在某些段落,你会觉得故事正朝着一个方向疾驰而去,但下一秒,作者又用一个看似倒叙的插叙,为你提供了至关重要的背景信息,使得之前所有的疑惑瞬间迎刃而解,那种“原来如此”的顿悟感是无与伦比的。这种对篇章布局的精妙掌控,展现了作者强大的控制力,使得即便是篇幅不短的文本,也始终保持着紧凑和高效,完全没有冗余的部分,阅读体验一气呵成,酣畅淋漓。
评分Audible Rachel的声音五星都不够
评分Audible Rachel的声音五星都不够
评分Audible Rachel的声音五星都不够
评分Audible Rachel的声音五星都不够
评分Audible Rachel的声音五星都不够
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