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Changing Places
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Changing Places
Author: David Lodge

Book Information
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:
9

ISBN-13: 9780140170986 - ISBN-10: 0140170987
Publication Date: 10/25/1979
Pages: 256


Other Versions of this Book: Audio Cassette, Hardcover

Book Description:
Euphoric State University with its whitestone, sun-drenched campus and England's damp red-brick University of Rummidge have an annual professorial exchange scheme, and as the first day of the last year of the tumultuous sixties dawns, Phillip Swallow and Morris Zapp are the designated exchangees. They know they'll be swapping class rosters, but what they don't know is that in a wildly spiraling transatlantic involvement they'll soon be swapping students, colleagues, and even wives.

Changing Places is a hilarious send-up of academic life, intellectual fashion, sex, and marriage by a writer Anthony Burgess has called 'one of the best novelests of his generation.'

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Top Member Book Reviews

John T. wrote on 11/21/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

Hilarious book about two professors who swap places for year, one from a thinly disguised Berkeley and one from English red-brick university.


Please Rate these Book Reviews

Diane L. wrote on 2/23/2009...


Took awhile to get into it, but it was a great book. Very funny. Well written with lots of humor.

Allison D. (alleigh) wrote on 8/30/2008...


David Lodge’s Changing Places is a boring 250-page exercise in navel-gazing. The book tries to take a humorous look at life in academia, but instead it is a pretentious and pompous. Additionally, while it is not his fault, the book is very dated. Originally written in 1975, it has references to women flying to England for abortions because they are illegal in the United States, to the change in music that has the younger generation gyrating on the dance floor, and to the sexual revolution and it’s overindulgences in partner-swapping and drug use.

The unfortunate aspect of Changing Places being an uninteresting read is that the writing style is unique and beautiful. There is no question as to why people what to read David Lodge from a purely rhetorical standpoint, as his prose have almost a poetic feel and his descriptions are vivid and realistic.

Ben R. wrote on 1/14/2006...


Quick read, fun story. It's about college life and two professors who switch places, one English and one American. They get caught up in each others lives in this 1960's set novel.


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