Kirkus Reviews blurb:
YELLOW DOG
Author: Amis, Martin
Review Date: AUGUST 15, 2003
Publisher:Miramax
Pages: 352
Price (hardback): $24.95
ISBN: 1-4013-5203-0
ISBN (hardback): 1-4013-5203-0
Category: FICTION
Classification: FEATURE
. . .
London crooks nurse old grievances and settle older scores as Amis has his
witty way with porno, Hollywood, modern marriage, airline terror, incest,
chatrooms, the Royals, and the gutter press.
The narrative stream is thick here, and, if this is possible in a book, kind
of loud, like the ramblings of an extremely entertaining if rather boozy
raconteur in a noisy pub. And if the listener is American, there's something
of the translation problem as Amis (Koba the Dread, 2002, etc.) lays on the
criminal class argot with a trowel, but it's huge fun even at 85%
comprehension what with the great goofy targets and Amis's evil humor that
goes to the brain's bad pleasure receptors like the very best drugs. The setup
is the mysterious mugging of Xan Meo, a London film personage of criminal
descent. Well and very successfully into his second marriage, Meo is alone and
celebrating his maturity with a couple of drinks when a pair of toughs clobber
him into insensibility, advising him between blows of his error: the mention
in print of a Joseph Andrews. Joseph Andrews? Amis follows Meo through his
recuperation and efforts to make sense of the nonsensical beating and the
culpable connection to a Fielding novel. Concurrently, England's King Henry IX
whose resemblance to a real-world prince is unmistakable, wrestles limply with
extortionists who have pictures of the Princess Royal in the bath, and the
slovenly star "reporter" of the gamiest tabloid in the solar system seeks love
and a more manly manhood. Meo's search for meaning is grievously hampered by
addled memories and very unpleasant personality alterations, and his marriage
is in great peril. Sorting it out involves a beautiful and bent porno star, a
trip to sleaziest California, and much consultation with Meo's breathtakingly
violent career-criminal relatives. The King's diggings will tap into some of
the same veins that Meo's working.
Raucous, confusing, hilarious, and, when least expected, furiously intelligent
and touchi ng.
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