The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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The Appointment
Queen Mary Prize (RofC UK)
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2021 RofC longlist - The Appointment
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Hugh, Active moderator
(last edited Feb 04, 2021 08:04AM)
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Feb 04, 2021 04:23AM


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Is the author really Freddie Starr?
Well at least its short - although come to think of it so was Freddie Starr


I think this is much more a RoC fit than Minor Detail, and a better book, but I guarantee you will hate it Gumble.



My favourite Malina quote: Reading is a vice which can replace all other vices or temporarily take their place in more intensely helping people live, it is a debauchery, a consuming addiction. No, I don’t take any drugs, I take books.

In terms of Bernhard (who again I have not read so I may be talking nonsense!!) I think in this case the inspiration makes more sense than in many other authors who think they just have to write a mix of misanthropy and scatology and pretend it’s literature. Here I think the author is very much in Bernhard’s Nestbeschmutzer tradition - albeit here cleverly attacking a German society that considers itself liberal and tolerant rather than a traditional/conservative Austrian one and criticising the country’s attitudes to its Nazi past from a different direction.
Mind you I have only read 30 pages of this!!!

Volckmer was inspired by Austrian writer Thomas Bernhard, whose narrators’ darkly comic rants were also read as a critique of his national identity. But the most obvious structural parallel is Portnoy’s Complaint by Philip Roth – another monologue delivered in a consulting room that Volckmer admits to finding hysterically funny, for all its contemporary incorrectness.
My 4 star rating is 4 + 2 for Bernhard reference - 2 for Roth reference (I have had the misfortune of reading him - not a mistake I will repeat)
https://www.theguardian.com/books/202...

Q:The book I couldn’t finish
A: As soon as the main character in American Pastoral by Philip Roth asked his daughter to kiss him in an erotic way, I tossed it.

Both are here
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

"This really doesn't make sense to me. When I got to the end, I could not figure out what happened." At least that quote seems honest and less invented to gain atention. And let us applaud her in "the shameless art of self promotion," for managing to name her own title in answer to the question on books that influenced her most. I apologize for my digression and snark in advance but not only must I throw a little defense to Roth who cannot defend himself, but Jane's answers make it damn hard to resist.

That's exactly what I thought when I read her remark, Sam. She is someone whose books I had been intending to read, but now, probably not.
Taking a portion of Paul's quote above:
But the most obvious structural parallel is Portnoy’s Complaint by Philip Roth – another monologue delivered in a consulting room that Volckmer admits to finding hysterically funny, for all its contemporary incorrectness.
The "incorrectness" would have existed when written, not just contemporarty - that's the point of his books, isn't it? I have not read American Pastoral yet, but being in the middle of The Counterlife, written in 1986, the hilarious "incorrectness" in the first section was just as incorrect in 1986 as it is now - he's not providing any sympathy or even empathy with the perpetrators. And it is indeed hilarious.

I think Roth for me is an author I'm glad others have read - he's clearly very influential, this wonderful novel a case in point - so I don't have to (see also Pynchon, Thomas).

At the risk of being a book snob, I think you’re not missing anything not having read Jane Smiley, Ang.





If anyone wants one, let me know.

I am still in shock that having written this - a reference of course to "Freddie Starr ate my hamster" - it actually turned out to have a section on someone who ate red squirrels



I did not notice the comparison to Roth, but I have mostly forgotten Portnoy's. I did see the comparison to Bernhard. Overall I found the shock humor appropriate rather than gratuitous. Having completed the novel, my main impression was a sense of disguised and repressed trauma and anxiety in the protagonist which fit the situation quite well.



Books mentioned in this topic
A Thousand Acres (other topics)Atonement (other topics)
The Appointment (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jane Smiley (other topics)Ingeborg Bachmann (other topics)
Katharina Volckmer (other topics)