Who would have thought supplemental/tie in lit could be so well written? Honestly, this is the first book I've read in quite some time that really does have something for nearly everyone. It's dark, funny, witty, compelling, and actually builds a convincing artifice of the real world so much that, if it had been a stand-alone novel, I would've liked it just as much.
The show in which this book sprang from, 'Californication', is a great one. I'm an unabashed fan (went through five seasons in less than two weeks, yah) and for the first two seasons 'God Hates Us All' was the latest novel (hilariously adapted into a movie called 'A Funny Little Thing Called Love' in the show) of the show's protagonist writer/anti-hero Hank Moody, played to deadpan emotionally desolated/devastated (former word another reviewers, latter mine) snarker Godhood by David Duchovney. After the show's success this novel was commissioned to act as a tie-in for the premiere of the third season.
This book could have failed on many levels, but it didn't, and even almost miraculously, succeeds in nearly every way. The book really feels as if it had been written by Hank Moody (though the novel more than stands on its own without the show backing it up, honestly save for one or two funny references towards the novel's end, it's not necessary to watch the show, though as a fan I recommend it A LOT) with his uniquely skewed and cynical disposition tinging every remark and observation the main character flips (off) to the reader.
Plot here while not complicated is a well executed (and shadily satirical) glimpse at relationships, personal connections, and what it means to be happy, or even if happiness is a real possibility among the fragile and guarded characters...who could just as easily be people that most of us could recognize. Through the entire story I felt as though I was a silent friend of the main character, doing what I could to keep up with him, understanding him well, and doubting myself every step of the way through every set piece of New York and (bit of a spoiler) South Korea. Gritty and grand, beautiful and hideous, superficial and slick veneer giving way to hidden, and usually scarred, depths of thought and soul, this is a quick but heavy and affecting read that is more than worth the time.