Identify Of Books Lancelot
| Title | : | Lancelot |
| Author | : | Walker Percy |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 257 pages |
| Published | : | September 4th 1999 by Picador USA (first published 1977) |
| Categories | : | Fiction. Literature. Classics. Novels. American. Southern. Literary Fiction |

Walker Percy
Paperback | Pages: 257 pages Rating: 3.73 | 2534 Users | 177 Reviews
Interpretation In Pursuance Of Books Lancelot
Lancelot Lamar is a disenchanted lawyer who finds himself confined in a mental asylum with memories that don't seem worth remembering. It all began the day he accidentally discovered he was not the father of his youngest daughter, a discovery which sent Lancelot on modern quest to reverse the degeneration of America. Percy's novel reveals a shining knight for the modern age--a knight not of romance, but of revenge.Point Books Concering Lancelot
| Original Title: | Lancelot |
| ISBN: | 0312243073 (ISBN13: 9780312243074) |
| Edition Language: | English |
Rating Of Books Lancelot
Ratings: 3.73 From 2534 Users | 177 ReviewsWeigh Up Of Books Lancelot
Lancelot has interesting moments. Certainly the character portrait is very interesting. However, I found other aspects of it (such as a constant stream of hints that the modern world is hopelessly degenerate) tiresome. It would be good for people who are interested in looking at the idea of evil and Hell from the Christian standpoint. I won't say it's a bad book, because it isn't. For some reason that I can't explain, it rubbed me the wrong way.There was so much about the way this was written that I wish I had the ability to do. That being said, it was a tough read. Tough in the sense that the themes were mature and complex, the way they were explored was at times difficult, and the imagery was a bit too predictable (though I think that ended up working). I don't know that there were any clear answers to the complexities the story presents. The ending was a bit of a surprise, even though I was aware that it had a certain unknown
Lancelot has interesting moments. Certainly the character portrait is very interesting. However, I found other aspects of it (such as a constant stream of hints that the modern world is hopelessly degenerate) tiresome. It would be good for people who are interested in looking at the idea of evil and Hell from the Christian standpoint. I won't say it's a bad book, because it isn't. For some reason that I can't explain, it rubbed me the wrong way.

A man realizes he's been sleeping his way through life when he learns of his wife's infidelity. He wakes up and is disgusted with the ways that we all live. Life has no meaning. He ends up in a prison/insane asylum. This is his rant as he searches for meaning. I loved this book. Percy writes so well.June 2015-re read. Lancelot tells his priest friend that life is meaningless. The closest thing to meaning for him is sexual desire, which he sees as merely violent. The priest is silent throughout
The structure of this novel reminds me of the movie Amadeus. There's no one here analogous to Mozart, but nevertheless a crime has been committed, and (like Salieri in the film) the man who felt driven to do it is now sorting out the meaning of it all while addressing a silent priest-like figure.As such, this becomes a meditation on good and evil, on what matters and what does not, and it covers material that Percy handles in his other novels: Essentially, a character awakens to find himself in
For a book about adultery, murder, insanity, and arson you wouldn't expect to laugh as much as I did reading Walker Percy's Lancelot. The book is wonderfully narrated and an interesting commentary on modern life.
I cannot tolerate this age.Lancelot Andrewes Lamar is quite content to let his life unspool in quiet reflection in his refurbished pigeonnier with its exposed historic bricks and three inch thick cypress floors, all built by the hands of slaves. I was moderately happy. At least at the moment I was happy. But not for the reasons given above. The reason I was happy was that I was reading for perhaps the fourth or fifth time a Raymond Chandler novel. It gave me pleasure, (no, Ill put it more


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