Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Cannonball Read 3 - Review #9 - Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

It took me a while to finish the old boy, but here I am. Catch-22 is a whopper of a satire, and Heller does an amazing job of capturing the frustration and impotence of bureaucracy and the horror and senselessness of war. The novel takes place towards the end of WWII, and centers around Yossarian, an American soldier who is disaffected with the war effort and is constantly trying to figure out how to stay out of harm's way while the powers that be keep raising the number of missions before the soldiers can go home. Yossarian is our eyes as the reader, and seems to be the only one who really sees the stupidity of bureaucratic processes and how ineffectual a big effort like an international war seems from the front lines. While the book is very funny, there is this undercurrent of tension and darkness that really comes to a head towards the end of the book. The reader also gets to know Yossarian's friends and fellow soldiers, many of whom meet less than satisfying ends, as will happen when on the front lines of a major war. I really felt Yossarian's rage and frustration, and his struggle with wanting to save himself while also being loyal to his sense of morality. The book flips back and forth from past to present, sometimes returning to the same event from someone else's perspective, but the timeline is not terribly complicated, so it isn't bothersome. Catch-22 is so expertly written because Heller makes the reader just as anxious and angry as his main character and makes you feel something genuine amidst all that satire. It took me a while to finish, but I'm glad I took the time.

1 comment:

  1. Anxious and angry, yes...but so delightedly confused and confounded because the characters are so absorbing and compelling and many even likable! Reading this felt like laughing in the dark, nervously...

    klingonfree

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