Vernon God Little: A 21st Century Comedy in the Presence of Death

by D. B. C. Pierre | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 1841954608 Global Overview for this book
Registered by augustusgloop of Sydney CBD, New South Wales Australia on 5/14/2004
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1 journaler for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by augustusgloop from Sydney CBD, New South Wales Australia on Friday, May 14, 2004
Amazon.com -
"The surprise winner of the 2003 Man Booker Prize, DBC Pierre's debut novel, Vernon God Little, makes few apologies in its darkly comedic portrait of Martirio, Texas, a town reeling in the aftermath of a horrific school shooting. Fifteen-year-old Vernon Little narrates the first-person story with a cynical twang and a four-letter barb for each of his diet-obsessed townsfolk. His mother, endlessly awaiting the delivery of a new refrigerator, seems to exist only to twist an emotional knife in his back; her friend, Palmyra, structures her life around the next meal at the Bar-B-Chew Barn; officer Vaine Gurie has Vernon convicted of the crime before she's begun the investigation; reporter Eulalio Ledesma hovers between a comforting father-figure and a sadistic Bond villain; and Jesus, his best friend in the world, is dead--a victim of the killings. As his life explodes before him, Vernon flees his home in pursuit of a tropical fantasy: a cabin on a beach in Mexico he once saw in the movie Against All Odds. But the police--and TV crews--are in hot pursuit.

Vernon God Little is a daring novel and demands a patient reader, not because it is challenging to read--Pierre's prose flows effortlessly, only occasionally slipping from the unmistakable voice of his hero--but because the book skates so precariously between the almost taboo subject of school violence and the literary gamesmanship of postmodern fiction. Yet, as the novel unfolds, Pierre's parodic version of American culture never crosses the line into caricature, even when it climaxes in a death-row reality TV show. And Vernon, whose cynicism and smart-ass "learnings" give way to a poignant curiosity about the meaning of life, becomes a fully human, profoundly sympathetic character."
--Patrick O'Kelley

Journal Entry 2 by augustusgloop from Sydney CBD, New South Wales Australia on Tuesday, February 26, 2008
I tried but I just couldn't get into this. It's interesting that the review above specifies a "patient reader" - that I ain't, altho' truth be told I found the prose a little too manic for my liking.

Released 8 yrs ago (9/18/2015 UTC) at Hurlstone Park Station Little Free Library in Hurlstone Park, New South Wales Australia

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