Another (this time shorter) cracker from the Millennial Thomas Mann with the Rockstar Looks, who remains, to me, one of the most fascinating and smart observers of this century and an absolute pattern-weaving innovator.
This one's far shorter than recent ones and fictionalises the career of wunderkind Man Who Brought Big Brother to France (I can't remember his real name, but the biographical details seem similar and he has a surname that approximates to Smallcock). As per Bellanger, we get a pretty impressive analysis of the development of TV as an art form of sorts and its evolution in tandem with Debordian thinking about the viewer-TV relationship, with politics and culture.
As someone who didn't grow up in France and only knows a few of the major titles fromthe 80s (Club Dorothee and Helene et les Garcons...which I was addicted to one Summer in Russia, with the Russian audio translation spoken over the still-audible French by a one-man interpreter, a la Russe), I won't have had the full experience of the content and game shows that populate the story. Still, the macro points hold. It's an age of stunning salaries, coke, shagging, presenters with God-like statuses...and yet to be blown apart by the internet. It's a pretty good accompaniment to Beigbeder's 99F, actually - as a picture of the hedonistic ads and telly 90s.
In many respects, it's just good biography and culture - but it's topped off with some strong set-pieces. It's not as Mann-like and conceptual as previous novels (the superb 'Continent de la Douceur', built around a fictional Slovenia-like chess-and-maths micropower) or the very credible 'Le Grand Paris' (Bellanger is great on careerism and the 'Big Swinging Dicks' of high politics and business), but it's a very original work.
It probably won't make it into English (oddly, as ever), but here's a novelist who's properly thinking about the job of a novel. And his stuff is always reliably *novel*.