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'''''Flowers for Algernon''''' is a [[soft science fiction]] story and play written by [[Daniel Keyes]]. It was originally published as a [[novelette]] in the April 1959 issue of ''[[The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction]]'', winning a [[Hugo Award|Hugo award]] for [[Hugo Award for Best Short Story|Best Short Fiction]] in 1960. Keyes later expanded it into a full-length novel under the same title, which won the [[Nebula Award for Best Novel]], awarded by the [[Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America]], in [[1966]].
'''''Flowers for Algernon''''' is a [[soft science fiction]] story and play written by [[Daniel Keyes]]. It was originally published as a [[novelette]] in the April 1959 issue of ''[[The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction]]'', winning a [[Hugo Award|Hugo award]] for [[Hugo Award for Best Short Story|Best Short Fiction]] in 1960. Keyes later expanded it into a full-length novel under the same title, which won the [[Nebula Award for Best Novel]], awarded by the [[Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America]], in [[1966]].


==Plot summary==


The story of Flowers for Algernon centers on Charlie Gordon, a mentally challenged janitor (37 years old in the original novella, 32 years old in the full novel), who volunteers to take part in an experimental intelligence-enhancing treatment. His progress parallels that of Algernon, a laboratory mouse who had been "enhanced" earlier. The story is told from Charlie's point of view and written as a journal, or progris riport, as he initially spells it, which he keeps as part of the experiment. Succeeding entries trace Charlie's ever-increasing comprehension and intelligence in the aftermath of the treatment, as he passes through "normalcy", and then reaches super-genius level. He becomes more intelligent than the doctors who invented the procedure.

He discovers both the advantages of intelligence and awareness, including his sexual-emotional relationship with his former teacher, Alice Kinnian; and the disadvantages, as he discovers that the people he thought were his friends had only viewed him as 'entertainment', and now resent his superior abilities. His courtship of Alice becomes turbulent and finally withers into misery when she too comes to resent his superior intellect, which lowers her self-esteem.

Yet, all else seems to be well, until Algernon's enhanced intelligence begins to fade rapidly. As Charlie himself confirms, the neural enhancement is only temporary, and he too is doomed to revert to his original mental state. Some say that Algernon's death is supposed to imply that the treatment will also eventually kill Charlie, but his own notes on the subject, dubbed the Algernon-Gordon Effect, say nothing of his impending death. He records his struggles to find a way to stop the decay until he realizes the futility of it all. The title's mention of flowers is a reference to Charlie's last request that "please if you get a chanse put some flowrs on Algernons grave in the bak yard...".


==Literary significance and criticism==
==Literary significance and criticism==

Revision as of 07:10, 22 January 2008

This article is about the short story, play and novel. For the film, see Charly. For the Kyosuke Himuro album, see Flowers for Algernon (album).
Flowers for Algernon
File:Algernon.jpg
AuthorDaniel Keyes
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction, Novella & Novel
PublisherHarcourt
Publication date
April 1959 (original novella) &
March 1966 (full novel)
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages216
ISBNISBN 0-15-131510-8 (first edition, hardback) Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character

Flowers for Algernon is a soft science fiction story and play written by Daniel Keyes. It was originally published as a novelette in the April 1959 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, winning a Hugo award for Best Short Fiction in 1960. Keyes later expanded it into a full-length novel under the same title, which won the Nebula Award for Best Novel, awarded by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, in 1966.

Plot summary

The story of Flowers for Algernon centers on Charlie Gordon, a mentally challenged janitor (37 years old in the original novella, 32 years old in the full novel), who volunteers to take part in an experimental intelligence-enhancing treatment. His progress parallels that of Algernon, a laboratory mouse who had been "enhanced" earlier. The story is told from Charlie's point of view and written as a journal, or progris riport, as he initially spells it, which he keeps as part of the experiment. Succeeding entries trace Charlie's ever-increasing comprehension and intelligence in the aftermath of the treatment, as he passes through "normalcy", and then reaches super-genius level. He becomes more intelligent than the doctors who invented the procedure.

He discovers both the advantages of intelligence and awareness, including his sexual-emotional relationship with his former teacher, Alice Kinnian; and the disadvantages, as he discovers that the people he thought were his friends had only viewed him as 'entertainment', and now resent his superior abilities. His courtship of Alice becomes turbulent and finally withers into misery when she too comes to resent his superior intellect, which lowers her self-esteem.

Yet, all else seems to be well, until Algernon's enhanced intelligence begins to fade rapidly. As Charlie himself confirms, the neural enhancement is only temporary, and he too is doomed to revert to his original mental state. Some say that Algernon's death is supposed to imply that the treatment will also eventually kill Charlie, but his own notes on the subject, dubbed the Algernon-Gordon Effect, say nothing of his impending death. He records his struggles to find a way to stop the decay until he realizes the futility of it all. The title's mention of flowers is a reference to Charlie's last request that "please if you get a chanse put some flowrs on Algernons grave in the bak yard...".

Literary significance and criticism

In January 1970, the school board of Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada, as well as Calgary, Alberta, Canada, banned the novel-length expansion of Flowers for Algernon from the local grade-nine curriculum and the school library, after a parent complained that it was "filthy and immoral." The president of the BC Teachers' Federation criticized the action. Flowers for Algernon was part of the BC Department of Education list of approved books for grade nine and was recommended by the BC Secondary Association of Teachers of English. A month later, the board reconsidered and returned the book to the library; they did not, however, lift its ban from the curriculum. [1] [2]

While the full novel does contain material about the character's personal life (that is, flashbacks of experiences of puberty that may be objectionable to some readers), the original short story does not. It is on the American Library Association list of the 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990-2000 at number 47.[3]

Awards and nominations

The original short story won a Hugo award for Best Short Fiction in 1960. It was later expanded into a novel of the same title which won the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1966.

Preceded by Nebula Award for Best Novel
1966
(tied with Babel-17)
Succeeded by

Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

A list of the numerous adaptations of the story can be found here [1].

Allusions/references from other works

Explicit:

  • Japanese rock singer Kyosuke Himuro's solo debut album is named Flowers for Algernon.
  • Flowers for Algernon's title is mentioned in a Nujabes rap song named "Feather."
  • In episode 14 of season 5 (Smile Time) of the TV series Angel, Charles Gunn's implant which granted him complete knowledge of human and demon law and languages is failing, and the doctor's diagnosis is "Acute Flowers For Algernon Syndrome."
  • The Newsradio episodes "Arcade" and "Flowers for Matthew" both reference the book. in "Flowers for Matthew", Matthew drinks what he thinks is a intelligence-boosting drink and becomes smart through the placebo effect.
  • If, in the 2005 video game Destroy All Humans!, a player scans a Majestic Psi-Mutant, a possible thought is "Good mouse... Algernon... smarter than.. Charlie..."
  • In an episode of the comic strip Tom the Dancing Bug titled "Flowers for Trinitron", the temporary loss of cable television service causes a sedentary young man to blossom into a creative genius, until his TV starts working again.
  • In the episode "MACHINES DÉSIRANTES" of the anime Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, one of the Tachikomas, after gaining self-awareness, states that it has an interest in reading books and is shown to be reading Flowers for Algernon at the time.
  • The book is referenced in an episode of Friends: when Joey and Chandler contemplate moving back from the large luxurious apartment to the small dingy apartment, Joey sees no problem with this. Chandler asks him incredulously, "Haven't you ever read Flowers for Algernon?!"
  • It is used as the solution for a subplot of the Adult Swim show Frisky Dingo. In the episode "Flowers for Nearl", the Xtacles attempt to pass off a mentally challenged man as the person they had been sent to kidnap, giving him an injection to increase his intelligence. The novel is specifically mentioned by one of the Xtacles, asking "So...who's read Flowers for Algernon?", to which the others incorrectly reply "Oooh, about the kid with all the chains, and the goggles, and at the end he gets killed with a shotgun?" (A mistaken reference to Harrison Bergeron, the dystopian science fiction story written by Kurt Vonnegut.)
  • Mentioned in the 2002 movie Adaptation when the character of Donald Kaufman suggests Flowers for Algernon as an example of a movie about flowers, to which Charlie Kaufman replies, "It's not about flowers; besides it's not a movie." regardless of the fact that the book had been filmed twice (once as Charly in 1968, and as a TV movie in 2000 under the same title).
  • An issue of Justice League of America features Plastic Man and Martian Manhunter discussing the book as a parallel to their own situation (they had been separated from their superhuman alter-egos, and Plastic Man wanted to reverse the process). Mention is also made of the movie adaptation, Charly.
  • In the game World Of Warcraft[4], the Undead capital city "Undercity" contains an alchemist named Algernon, holding a flower in the off hand.
  • In the webcomic PvP, Skull, the normally unintelligent troll, accidentally sticks a fork into a toaster and electrocutes himself, becoming a genius in the process. As time goes by, however, he feels isolated from his friends, and decides to electrocute himself again to reverse the process. After Brent reads Skull's note explaining his actions, he says, "I'll go plant some flowers for Algernon in the back yard." Later, when the super intelligent cat, Scratch, electrocutes himself and becomes stupid, while regaining his intelligence he muses "This is like Flowers for Algernon in reverse." [5]
  • In episode 12 of the television series Dirty Pair, the 3WA's R&D department increases the intelligence of a mouse (called Algernon), who then leads other mice in the 3WA headquarters to take over the building.
  • Aesop Rock's song "Citronella" features the phrase "... citronella for Algernon" in the lyrics.
  • Stephen Colbert refers to Alberto Gonzales during The Colbert Report's Word as an imbecile by displaying, "Flowers for Alberto" on the screen.
  • In the episode "Zero to Murder in Sixty Second" of the TV series Psych, the lead character Shawn Spencer has a "psychic" vision that includes, "And I see a warehouse, and cargo containers, and a street sign, and a little mouse named Algernon in a maze."
  • In a PlanetFargo column on the video game website GameSpy.com about the Nintendo DS game Brain Age, Fargo documents his experiences in a journal format, reflecting his changes in intelligence through his behavior and grammar in a similar style, while quantifying his changes in intelligence with his "Brain Age" from within the game. [6]
  • Mentioned in Frisky Dingo episode "Flowers for Nearl". Xander Crews's retarded twin brother Nearl is enhanced to genius level by being injected with brain juice (obtained from sinister German research scientists by swapping it for a pair of trainers) before being shot in the head because "with this twin brother it was all getting too complicated".

Implicit:

  • A Curious Feeling, the 1979 debut solo album by Genesis keyboardist Tony Banks, was based on a concept inspired by the novel.[7]
  • An episode of The Simpsons, entitled "HOMЯ", is apparently a loose parody of Flowers for Algernon; Homer is given an operation to remove a crayon from his brain, resulting in increased intelligence. He proceeds to lose his friends, and consequently requests that the crayon be re-inserted by brain surgeon Moe. Not unlike Charlie, he cannot understand a note he wrote to Lisa while intelligent. Indeed, even the misspelling of the main character's name alludes to the spelling of the title Charly in the 1968 movie.
  • In the Rugrats episode "The Smell of Success" Chuckie's constantly stuffed-up nose is cured by a machine that had been previously tested on a mouse and, as in Flowers for Algernon, the effects of the machine wear off, first on the mouse, and then Chuckie. [8]
  • a 1971 theatrical production by the West Stanly Players in North Carolina.

See also

References

  1. ^ Birdsall, Peter (1978). Mind War: Book Censorship in English Canada. CANLIT. p. 37. ISBN 0920566014.
  2. ^ Dick, Judith (1982). Not in Our Schools? School Book Censorship in Canada: A Discussion Guide. Canadian Library Assn. p. 8. ISBN 0888021623.
  3. ^ The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990–2000 -ALA.org
  4. ^ http://www.g4tv.com/cheat/features/51801/World_of_Warcraft_Secrets.html
  5. ^ http://www.pvponline.com/article/3169/wed-feb-28
  6. ^ http://www.gamespy.com/articles/702/702169p1.html
  7. ^ Tony Banks Biography -tonybanks-online.com
  8. ^ Rugrats-Faire Play/The Smell of Success tv.com

External links