Author | Don DeLillo |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | Scribner |
Publication date
|
14 April 2003 |
Media type | Print (hardback & paperback) |
Pages | 224 (hardcover first edition) |
ISBN | (hardcover first edition) |
OCLC | 50441437 |
813/.54 21 | |
LC Class | PS3554.E4425 C67 2003 |
Cosmopolis is Don DeLillo's thirteenth novel. It was published by Scribner on April 14, 2003.
Cosmopolis is the story of Eric Packer, a 28-year-old multi-billionaire asset manager who makes an odyssey across midtown Manhattan in order to get a haircut. He drives around in a stretch limo which is richly described as luxurious, spacious and highly technical, filled with television screens and computer monitors, bulletproofed and floored with Carrara marble. It is also cork-lined to eliminate (though unsuccessfully, as Packer notes) the intrusion of street noise.
Packer's voyage is obstructed by various traffic jams caused by a presidential visit to the city, a full-fledged anti-capitalist riot, and a funeral procession for a Sufi rap star. Along the way, the hero has several chance meetings with his wife and sexual encounters with other women. Packer is also stalked by two men, a comical "pastry assassin" and an unstable "credible threat". Through the course of the day, the protagonist loses incredible amounts of money for his clients by betting against the rise of the yen.
Reviews for Cosmopolis were generally mixed, especially compared to many of DeLillo's previous novels. Peter Wolfe of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch called the book "eerily brilliant" and that it "confirms Don DeLillo's place among [the best writers] elite."John Updike wrote in The New Yorker that "DeLillo’s fervent intelligence and his fastidious, edgy prose... weave halos of import around every event". Walter Kim criticized the novel in The New York Times, writing "Beware the novel of ideas, particularly when the ideas come first and all the novel stuff (like the story) comes second. Cosmopolis is an intellectual turkey shoot, sending up a succession of fat targets just in time for its author to aim and fire the rounds he loaded before he started writing." Also in the New York Times, Michiko Kakutani described the novel as "a major dud", with a "hokey, contrived storyline".