This section contains 2,548 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “Rainbows,” in London Review of Books, September 12, 1991, pp. 14-5.
In the following review, Coster offers an unfavorable evaluation of Paradise News.
Had the Pentagon, back in the late Sixties, accepted Boeing’s tender for a massive new cargo aircraft for the United States Air Force, David Lodge would not have been able to write Paradise News. Instead, however, Lockheed got the contract, and Boeing were left with a redundant set of blueprints for the biggest furniture van never built. To save all that development money going to waste, they came up with a blindingly simple solution: fill it with seats, and call it an airliner. Thus was the Boeing 747 born, and now David Lodge has written what may, in socio-historical terms, be the first post-Jumbo Jet novel. Just as Wordsworth and Ruskin in the last century predicted and fulminated against the social implications of the new railways'...
This section contains 2,548 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |