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Wonderful World (ARE)
by Javier Calvo | Literature & Fiction
Registered by Antheras of Waterloo, Ontario Canada on Monday, March 23, 2009
Average 8 star rating by BookCrossing Members 

status (set by Antheras): reserved


1 journaler for this copy...

Journal Entry 1 by Antheras from Waterloo, Ontario Canada on Monday, March 23, 2009

This book has not been rated.

Product Description:

A bravura performance by a groundbreaking new writer—a novel set in contemporary Barcelona and made up of multiple storylines, including a fictional manuscript by Stephen King

Wonderful World is the story of a son trying to make his father proud—by becoming an international criminal.

Lucas Giraut inherits the family company from a father who never really cared enough to get to know him. This inheritance comes with a lot of unanswered questions and one archenemy: Lucas's mother, Fanny, an ambitious and ruthless entrepreneur who believes Lucas is as useless as his father, Lorenzo, an enigmatic man whose recent death—under mysterious circumstances—delights her.

Valentina Parini is a precocious and troubled seventh-grader, and the self-proclaimed Top European Expert on the Work of Stephen King. Lucas Giraut is her upstairs neighbor and her only friend. He indulges Valentina as she reveals her dark fantasies of retribution on her classmates and teachers. As Valentina struggles with growing up, Lucas endeavors to understand what he's been bequeathed by his father. Following clues found in a windowless secret apartment and in his dreams, he ends up deep in Barcelona's underworld, far from the comforts of his home, a former ducal palace in the Gothic Quarter.

In Wonderful World, Javier Calvo brings together a huge cast of unforgettable characters in a haunting, masterful tale filled with scandalous behavior and dangerous crimes. A dazzling novel in which reality and fantasy entwine, it hails the arrival of a powerful and original voice. 


Journal Entry 2 by Antheras from Waterloo, Ontario Canada on Wednesday, April 15, 2009

8 out of 10

My Review:
"There're always kneecaps that are screaming out, begging for us to shoot them, of course." – Wonderful World

Thirty years ago, Lorenzo Girault was imprisoned for questionable activities in his antiques business. An undiagnosed pathology, referred to by his family as his "window problem," led Lorenzo to live in rooms without windows and to membership in the "Down with the Sun Society." After Lorenzo's death, his son Lucas struggles to become the man he is sure his father wished him to be. Compelled by a need to understand the legacy left by his father, and determine exactly who was responsible for his father's downfall, Lucas searches for clues in his Lorenzo's secret apartment.

Lucas's quest places him at odds with his mother and in the midst of two gangs in Barcelona's seedy underworld. His best friend is Valentina, a 12-year-old girl who has fashioned herself as Europe's top expert on Stephen King and who indulges in violent fantasies of retribution against her school chums. As Lucas sorts through the detritus of his father's life, Valentina struggles with growing up, while all around them swirls a surreal cast: a giant, comic book obsessed gang enforcer; a strip club owner with a fondness for women's coats; a dreadlock-sporting Russian underling with Rastafarian leanings; and an uptight art dealer for whom thoroughness is next to godliness.

Wonderful World, Javier Calvo’s first novel translated into English, if a film would be David Lynch and Quentin Tarantino’s love child; Lynch for the indescribable plot and Tarantino for the surreal, shocking violence. A feverish verbal joyride, Wonderful World pulls no punches. The quote at the beginning of this review is a typical line of dialogue; rapid-fire and edgy.

At times family drama, mob story, mystery and Hero's journey, Wonderful World is a dizzying, multilayered construction that even includes excerpts from a fictitious Stephen King novel. Calvo's cast is massive and the numerous plot lines almost requires story mapping to keep straight. Yet the quirky characters and chaotic plots are adeptly controlled by this talented author. Not for everyone, Calvo's "open conception of narration" owes much to the Free Cinema movement, developed in the late 1950s and characterized by a deliberate lack of box office appeal.
 




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