Reviews for Red pill

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A writer on retreat in Germany is unwittingly drawn into the world of alt-right ideologues. Much like Kunzru’s excellent White Tears (2017), this novel features a lead character stumbling into confrontations about race and society he’s ill-prepared to handle. The unnamed narrator is a Brooklyn creative-writing teacher and essayist struggling to write a book on the self in literature. A break (both emotional and careerwise) seems to arrive when, in early 2016, he begins a three-month fellowship at the Deuter Center in Wannsee, Germany. But almost immediately the good vibes turn bad: A blowhard scholar explodes the writer’s thesis, everybody’s online activities are creepily scrutinized, and what’s with that staffer wearing a Pepe the Frog pin? (Adding to the queasy unease, it's hard to ignore that Wannsee hosted the conference where the Nazis finalized plans to implement the Final Solution.) Exasperated and demoralized, the narrator retreats into binge-watching a cop show whose leads are merciless with perps and who spew black-hearted monologues on humanity’s fate. In time, the narrator crosses paths with the show’s creator, Anton, a charismatic but smugly racist man. The increasingly paranoid narrator tries to get to the bottom of Anton’s ideology; meanwhile, the U.S. presidential election approaches. Plotwise, the novel is clunky, slow to establish the narrator’s character and awkwardly introducing Anton into the narrative; a lengthy section featuring a Deuter Center housecleaner’s experience being manipulated by the Stasi is razor-sharp in itself but effectively a sidebar to the main story. Yet as an allegory about how well-meaning liberals have been blindsided by pseudo-intellectual bigots with substantial platforms, it’s bleak but compelling. Our intellectual freedom, Kunzru writes, “is shrinking, its scope reduced by technologies of prediction and control, by social media’s sinister injunction to share.” This novel, in all its disorder, represents some worthy and spirited push back. “Kafkaesque” is an overused term, but it’s an apt one for this dark tale of fear and injustice. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
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Kunzru’s powerful latest (after White Tears) follows an unnamed Brooklyn writer who lands in Berlin for a fellowship at the Deuter Center in 2016. What’s supposed to be a writing retreat and a way to get past the creative block he was experiencing amid a midlife crisis, however, soon turns into an escalating disaster. The Center’s strict policy that residents share workspace clashes with the writer’s need for isolation, driving him to binge-watch Blue Lives, a cop show. Trouble begins when the narrator grows fascinated with the show’s persuasive nihilistic worldview, thus triggering his anxiety that his own work is futile and irrelevant. The novel takes a bizarre turn when the paranoid narrator has a chance encounter with the Blue Lives creator, Anton, a smug, alt-right ideologue. Obsessed with confronting Anton about Blue Lives’s pernicious message during the increasingly divisive U.S. presidential race, the narrator plows headlong down a self-destructive path. A subplot narrated by a cleaning woman who lives with memories of being controlled by the Stasi doesn’t quite tie together with the rest of the goings-on, but Kunzru does an excellent job of layering the atmosphere with fear and disquietude at every turning point. This nightmarish allegory leaves the reader with much to chew on about literature’s role in the battleground of ideas. Agent: Jonny Geller, Curtis Brown Group. (Sept.)


Library Journal
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From Kunzru, a Granta Best of Young British Novelists, comes a thought-provoker whose protagonist has won a major writing fellowship in Germany. But instead of working wanders about the horror-haunted Berlin suburb of Wannsee and binge-watches the bleak, downbeat cop show Blue Lives. When he meets Blue Lives creator Anton at a party, he decides that Anton is red-pilling his viewers with a negative, tooth-and-nail alt-right worldview.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

The mentally unstable narrator at the heart of Kunzru's (White Tears, 2017) dazzling novel can see the writing on the wall. Trump and Clinton are duking it out for the U.S. presidency, and this middling, Brooklyn-based author worries society has unraveled even before the 2016 results became known. So a literary residency at the fictional Deuter Center in Wannsee, a Berlin suburb, feels like a lifeline, one the narrator willingly grasps. Unfortunately the center’s strict accountability rules only further straitjacket the narrator until he slowly begins to unravel. He binge-watches a cop show whose alt-right creator, the narrator is convinced, is playing mind games with him. The ghost of history looms large too. Kunzru sets his protagonist in the grim shadow of the Nazi final solution. Near the writer's center, the narrator comes across the grave of Heinrich von Kleist, the German poet, dramatist, and writer who committed a murder-suicide in Wannsee. As Kunzru's protagonist slowly loses his hold on reality, he questions if what he’s seeing is just another whitewashed version of the truth. Kunzru has created a complex, challenging, and bold story about a world gone amok and a middle-aged man coming to terms with his one truth: his mediocrity.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A writer on retreat in Germany is unwittingly drawn into the world of alt-right ideologues.Much like Kunzrus excellent White Tears(2017), this novel features a lead character stumbling into confrontations about race and society hes ill-prepared to handle. The unnamed narrator is a Brooklyn creative-writing teacher and essayist struggling to write a book on the self in literature. A break (both emotional and careerwise) seems to arrive when, in early 2016, he begins a three-month fellowship at the Deuter Center in Wannsee, Germany. But almost immediately the good vibes turn bad: A blowhard scholar explodes the writers thesis, everybodys online activities are creepily scrutinized, and whats with that staffer wearing a Pepe the Frog pin? (Adding to the queasy unease, it's hard to ignore that Wannsee hosted the conference where the Nazis finalized plans to implement the Final Solution.) Exasperated and demoralized, the narrator retreats into binge-watching a cop show whose leads are merciless with perps and who spew black-hearted monologues on humanitys fate. In time, the narrator crosses paths with the shows creator, Anton, a charismatic but smugly racist man. The increasingly paranoid narrator tries to get to the bottom of Antons ideology; meanwhile, the U.S. presidential election approaches. Plotwise, the novel is clunky, slow to establish the narrators character and awkwardly introducing Anton into the narrative; a lengthy section featuring a Deuter Center housecleaners experience being manipulated by the Stasi is razor-sharp in itself but effectively a sidebar to the main story. Yet as an allegory about how well-meaning liberals have been blindsided by pseudo-intellectual bigots with substantial platforms, its bleak but compelling. Our intellectual freedom, Kunzru writes, is shrinking, its scope reduced by technologies of prediction and control, by social medias sinister injunction to share. This novel, in all its disorder, represents some worthy and spirited push back.Kafkaesque is an overused term, but its an apt one for this dark tale of fear and injustice. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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