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ILLYWHACKER

This new novel by the talented Australian writer (The Fat Man In History, 1980, and Bliss, 1981) clearly outlines the struggle for a national Australian identity. Even the title, Illywhacker, is a typically Australian slang term for a con-man or liar. Divided into three "books," the novel chronicles the life of Herbert Badgery, his lovers, his children, and his grandchildren. For over 500 pages we are somewhat entranced by this narrator who not only lies, but often believes the truth of his words, and eventually becomes caught in his own traps. Characters who begin with pronounced idiosyncracies develop into full-fledged lunatics: Badgery claims to be 139 years old; Molly McGrath wears an "electric chastity belt" to keep from going insane; an old Chinaman's amputated finger, kept in a vase, assumes various forms, including that of a fetus. It is a world where a woman quite naturally prefers to live in a cage, and a man's greatest talent is his ability to disappear by "making a dragon" with his body. The con-man's voice is an appropriate vehicle through which to penetrate the masks that people present to the world, and Carey's insights into human nature are sometimes startling. Unfortunately, such details also slow down the pace of the book; every detail, including the psychological causes and effects of the minutest action, must be fully explored. Overall, Carey proves himself an experimental writer par excellance, and the story is often delightful, but this remains a book only for the patient reader.

Pub Date: Aug. 1, 1985

ISBN: 0679767908

Page Count: 883

Publisher: Harper & Row

Review Posted Online: Sept. 19, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 1985

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THE INTUITIONIST

Whitehead skillfully orchestrates these noirish particulars together with an enormity of technical-mechanical detail and...

A dizzyingly-high-concept debut of genuine originality, despite its indebtedness to a specific source, ironically echoes and amusingly inverts Ralph Ellison’s classic Invisible Man.

In a deftly plotted mystery and quest tale that’s also a teasing intellectual adventure, Whitehead traces the continuing education of Lila Mae Watson, the first black woman graduate of the Institute for Vertical Transport and thus first of her race and gender to be employed by the Department of Elevator Inspectors. In a “famous city” that appears to be a future New York, Lila Mae compiles a perfect safety record working as an “Intuitionist” inspector who, through meditation, “senses” the condition of the elevators she’s assigned. But after an episode of “total freefall” in one of “her” elevators leads to an elaborate investigation, Lila Mae is drawn into conflict with one of the Elevator Guild’s “Empiricists,” those who, unlike Intuitionists, focus their attention on literal mechanical failures. Furthermore, it’s an election year for the Guild, pitting Intuitionist candidate Orville Lever against crafty Empiricist Frank Chancre, who has surreptitiously enlisted the muscle of mobster Johnny Shush. Hoping to escape these distractions while proving herself innocent, Lila Mae goes “underground” and makes some dangerous discoveries about the ideas and the life of Intuitionism’s founder, James Fulton, a visionary known to have been working on a “black box” that would revolutionize elevator construction and alter the nature of urban life forever. Lila Mae’s odyssey involves her further with such mysterious characters as Fulton’s former housemaid and lover, her circumspect “house nigger” colleague Pompey, a charmer named Natchez, who claims he’s Fulton’s nephew, and sinister Internal Affairs investigator Bart Arbogast.

Whitehead skillfully orchestrates these noirish particulars together with an enormity of technical-mechanical detail and resonant meditations on social and racial issues, bringing all into a many-leveled narrative equally effective as detective story and philosophical novel. Ralph Ellison would be proud.

Pub Date: Dec. 29, 1998

ISBN: 0-385-49299-5

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Anchor

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 1998

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FOLLOWERS

Endless clever details and suspenseful plotting make this speculative-fiction debut an addictive treat.

How far will our addiction to screens and our obsession with social media go? And how much will we pay for it?

The bill is large indeed in Angelo’s first novel. In alternating narratives beginning in 2015 and 2051, she creates two chilling versions of celebrity culture in techno-hell. It all starts with a post on a website called Lady-ish written by staff blogger Orla Cadden. “Sooo What Does The World’s Most Expensive Brow Gel Actually Do? One Instagram It Girl Finds Out” is the first of a series of pieces Orla concocts (down to scrubbing the writing off a tube of Maybelline for the photo shoot) to boost the profile of a wannabe Kardashian type—actually her roommate, Floss, whose drive to be famous in the absence of any talent or notable quality runs over everything in sight for the course of the novel. In the 2051 plot, we meet Marlow, a young wife in Constellation, California, a closed town populated with government-selected celebrities devoted entirely to the production of a reality show watched by everyone who does not live there. “Is it me or does Mar have kinda chubby armpits,” asks one of Marlow’s more than 12 million followers, watching her stretch before getting out of bed in the morning. “NOOOOOOO NO ONE WANTS TO WATCH ANOTHER PILL AD—PUT THE MARLOW FLAMINGO SMACKDOWN BACK ON!!!!!” screams another when Marlow gets upset with her network-issued storyline and throws a fit. Both the 2015 and 2051 plots revolve around a mysterious event called the Spill, which feels somewhat less original and interesting than the buildup to its reveal. However, the joy of the details continues all the way to a denouement in Atlantis (formerly Atlantic City), where the relationships we have begun to suspect between the characters of the two plotlines are untangled and confirmed.

Endless clever details and suspenseful plotting make this speculative-fiction debut an addictive treat.

Pub Date: Jan. 14, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-525-83626-8

Page Count: 432

Publisher: Graydon House

Review Posted Online: Sept. 29, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2019

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