Flores para Algernon

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Daniel Keyes: Flores para Algernon (Paperback, 1997, Acento Editorial)

Paperback, 219 pages

Published Jan. 5, 1997 by Acento Editorial.

ISBN:
978-84-483-0262-7
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5 stars (2 reviews)

Charles Gordon es un disminuido mental que ha llegado a la treintena relativamente integrado en la sociedad. Trabaja, tiene amigos, es simpático y tiene la sensación de ser querido. Acude a clases de lectura con la Srta. Alice para discapacitados y un gran interés por aprender. Su vida dará un giro radical cuando su familia accede a la propuesta de Alice para que forme parte de un experimento científico llevado a cabo con anterioridad con un ratón, Algernon, y con el fin de ver las consecuencias de esa cirugía del cerebro en un humano. La intervención ha sido un éxito, pero Algernon empieza a manifestar cambios de conducta que inquietan a los científicos ¿Afectará de igual manera a Charlie?. Todo este proceso y sus consecuencias son contadas a través de los ‘informes de progreso’ escritos por Gordon y es un recorrido por la mente humana y por el corazón de …

65 editions

Flowers for Algernon

4 stars

Goodness gracious. So many themes are touched on in this book, and I think I'll be haunted for some time to come by the ideas raised.

I'm a sucker for both an epistolary-style novel (which this classifies as, given the diary format) and the bildungsroman genre which I can also see reflected in the type of story it is, albeit not perfectly—so if either of those butter your biscuits well dangit bring out the tea cause these biscuits are ready to be eaten, buttered and all!!

Recommended read for many reasons, and not only because it's hard to let go of once started.

Review of 'Flowers for Algernon' on 'GoodReads'

5 stars

Poignant, sad, and deeply insightful

I had been assigned a watered-down adaptation of this in Junior High, so I went into this with some knowledge of what the general arc would be. What I didn't expect is that I would be reading until the sun came up, bawling my eyes out, absolutely shaken.

From the very first page, I liked Charlie Gordon. He comes across as innocent and sweet, with good intentions and a very one-dimensional frame of reference to the world. There's a few moments where people ask Charlie things that made me chuckle, like his initial confusion at the Rorschach test, but his attitude is strangely endearing.

The prose in this book is phenomenal. The gradual narrative shift from crude writing to eloquent philosophical insight is kind of an amazing writing trick, and the development of Charlie's awareness is hypnotic to watch.

In a way, I was kind …

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