Instruction Manual for Swallowing

4.08 based on 12 reviews.

Media:

Mass Market Paperbound Book

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$15.48 (+ FREE shipping in the U.S.)  

Product Description

Revealing a bestiary of hybrids from the techno-crazed future and the mythological past, this surreal short story collection takes imaginative leaps through a science fiction influenced landscape. Reflecting a cinematic feel, young couples reach defining stages in their relationships as zombies fall in love, a stalker tracks a young woman through time only to discover he's related to her, and a young man battles Godzilla in order to prove a point to his girlfriend. Blurring the boundaries between reality and hallucination--from robotic insects and in-growing cutlery to a woman impregnated with 37 embryos--these fantastical tales offer a world where the body is fluid, the spirit is mechanized, and the beasts know more about humanity than the humans do.

Product Details

  • Media: Mass Market Paperbound Book, 216 pages
  • Publisher: Carcanet Press Ltd. (Dec. 31st, 2008)
  • ISBN-10: 1905583044
  • ISBN-13: 9781905583041
  • Dimensions: 5.00 x 7.60 x 0.70 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.52 lbs

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Customer Reviews

  • Book Rating 4 out of 5
    Read Reviews on Goodreads

    by Craig from West Yorkshire , The United Kingdom | Jul 4, 2010

    I found this book because I’ve been interested in submitting something to the publishers, Comma Press, for some time. And I also thought it was one of the coolest titles of a book I’ve seen for a while. The Instructional Manual For Swallowing by Adam Marek is not your average book. It doesn’t quite fit anywhere, which is why you need to read it.

    As I’m always searching for strange and wonderful short stories that match, and surpass, the likes of Etgar keret, I was really excited at the prospect of Robotic insects, a restaurant for zombies, and a woman pregnant with 37 babies. In truth, I was damn near peeing my pants. And Marek didn’t disappoint, well, not too much. The first story really blew me away. 40 Litre Monkey tells the tale of a pet shop owner who measures all his animals by their volume. It was funny, sad and very surreal. My expectations were raised, and although the second story in the collection, the one about the pregnant woman with 37 babies, didn’t quite hit me squarely on the chin as the first, I could tell Marek had a gift for pulling you from the page.

    The subsequent stories that followed had a little more weight to them, which is probably why they dragged me to real world very quickly. It’s not that these stories are bad, it’s just that based on the first two stories, I was convinced Marek would be my guide to the dark places in his mind. Instead, he decided it would be best all round to “coast” for a while before throwing back the curtain. Ramping it up with stories about a man fighting both testicular cancer and a monster tearing up the city, a boy who can extract cutlery from his body, and the title story which illustrates how the body might function if it was controlled from within by a person, makes Marek an author to keep your eye on.

    Sure, with any short story collection, there are going to be lulls. Fortunately, there are not many here. From one story to the next, you’re caught between laughing, reeling back in surprise, and dropping to your knees with wonder. As the blurb perfectly illustrates, as you turn the first page you enter the “surreal, misshapen universe of Adam Marek’s first collection, where the body is fluid, the spirit mechanised and beasts often tell us more about our humanity than anything we can teach ourselves.”

    The price tag is worth it for the stories, 40 Litre Monkey, and The Instructional Manual For Swallowing.



  • Book Rating 3 out of 5
    Read Reviews on Goodreads

    by Jafar from San Diego, CA | Feb 6, 2008

    I picked up this book to try a new genre. I thought it was a collection of science fiction/fantasy short stories. While there’s an element of oddity in all of the stories, not all of them seemed obviously to me to be science fiction/fantasy. I think I’m just a novice in this genre. Marek has a pretty good and wacky imagination. Some of the stories were quite intelligent. Three stars because I’m comparing it with the only other collection of fantasy/science fiction short stories that I’ve read: Italo Calvino’s unquestionably-five-star Cosmicomics.


     1 people found this review helpful


  • Book Rating 5 out of 5
    Read Reviews on Goodreads

    by annie from The United Kingdom | May 15, 2010

  • Book Rating 5 out of 5
    Read Reviews on Goodreads

    by Holly from Leamington Spa, cv31 1nx, The United Kingdom | Apr 1, 2010

  • Book Rating 5 out of 5
    Read Reviews on Goodreads

    by Matt from Seaham, nr. Durham, The United Kingdom | Mar 3, 2010

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