The Feral Detective: A Novel by Jonathan Lethem --- 329 pages
In The Feral Detective Joanthan Lethem uses some of the conventions of the hard-boiled detective novel in an attempt to come to terms with the anguish and shock suffered by Progressives when all their comfortable assumptions about America were trashed by the election of Donald Trump.
The novel's protagonist is not the detective but the detective's client. Phoebe quits her job at the New York Times in protest after the Times post-election sitdown with Trump. At loose ends and feeling completely upended, Phoebe takes on a new challenge: Arabella, the rebellious daughter of her best friend, Sylvia, has dropped out of college and disappeared. Phoebe, who sees herself as Arabella's confidant and role model, decides to find Arabella and persuade her to return home.
Phoebe suspects Arabella has gone to California, so she heads off to L.A. where she winds up hiring a private investigator, Charles Heist --- the so-called Feral Detective --- as her local guide. Heist has an interesting past: he grew up in a hippie commune in the desert, abandoned by his parents, and ran away back to the city. He's made it his job to rescue children from similar situations. Even if they later decide to go back to the desert, he's at least given them the right to choose for themselves.
Heist leads Phoebe on a rambling journey into the High Desert country southeast of Los Angeles, following possible clues to Mount Baldy and then to Joshua Tree. The journey has allegorical overtones. Phoebe encounters people living off the grid and over the edge, constructing their own primitive tribal existence, an uneasy alliance of Bears (men) and Rabbits (women), that includes ritual hand-to-hand combat between Heist and Sweet Love, the leader of the Bears, with Arabella the prize for the winner.
It's an interesting book, by turns comic, profane, tender and violent. Sex is explicit in Phoebe's relationship with Heist (no surprise there).
This really isn't detective fiction; it's politics dressed up as a fable, one man's attempt to make sense of a senseless world. It's intended audience will greet it with relief; everyone else, I suspect, will find it incomprehensible.
Click HERE to read the review from Publishers Weekly.
Click HERE to read the review from CrimeReads.com
Click HERE to read the review from Time.com
Click HERE to read the interview with the author from National Public Radio.
Showing posts with label 2016 Presidential Election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2016 Presidential Election. Show all posts
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Thursday, March 30, 2017
How the Hell Did This Happen? by P.J. O'Rourke
How the Hell Did This Happen? The Election of 2016 by P.J. O'Rourke --- 216 pages
P.J. O'Rourke is a self-described libertarian, the H.L. Mencken Research Fellow at the Cato Institute, former editor of National Lampoon, and a political and social commentator on a variety of media, with eighteen books published, including the best sellers Parliament of Whores and Give War A Chance.
This latest book is a collection of pieces he did on the Presidential election campaign, beginning in June 2015 and ending with Election Day 2016, in which he skewers the performance of every candidate of both major parties. In the end, O'Rourke held his nose and endorsed Hillary Clinton as the most predictable and thus lesser of two evils, although not by much. His explanation of what happened? Confronted with the choices they were provided, the American electorate suffered a massive psychotic episode, comparable to the Salem witch trials of 1692. "So why not put Hillary on the dunking stool?"
Black humor at its finest. I laughed 'til I cried.
Click HERE to watch a video interview with the author from Bloomberg.com.
Click HERE to listen to a radio interview with the author from the Cato Institute.
Click HERE to read the review from Publisher's Weekly.
Click HERE to read the review from the Washington Independent Review of Books.
P.J. O'Rourke is a self-described libertarian, the H.L. Mencken Research Fellow at the Cato Institute, former editor of National Lampoon, and a political and social commentator on a variety of media, with eighteen books published, including the best sellers Parliament of Whores and Give War A Chance.
This latest book is a collection of pieces he did on the Presidential election campaign, beginning in June 2015 and ending with Election Day 2016, in which he skewers the performance of every candidate of both major parties. In the end, O'Rourke held his nose and endorsed Hillary Clinton as the most predictable and thus lesser of two evils, although not by much. His explanation of what happened? Confronted with the choices they were provided, the American electorate suffered a massive psychotic episode, comparable to the Salem witch trials of 1692. "So why not put Hillary on the dunking stool?"
Black humor at its finest. I laughed 'til I cried.
Click HERE to watch a video interview with the author from Bloomberg.com.
Click HERE to listen to a radio interview with the author from the Cato Institute.
Click HERE to read the review from Publisher's Weekly.
Click HERE to read the review from the Washington Independent Review of Books.
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