Monday, March 24, 2008

Amazing Disgrace


by James Hamilton-Paterson (2006)
ISBN 0-571-22939-5

A crazy book with recipes, medical "experimentation"; musical references and poetic quotes/inventions. The hero is a writer who works with sports people to "write other people's books for them" and sees his work as "the personal toad beneath which I have suffered for years", referring to Philip Larkin's Toads.

The recipes are incredible, probably inedible, and explained in detail. One can imagine them but they don't exactly set the saliva flowing!

The Daily Telegraph is quoted as saying that the author has "a genius for comic witticisms". Here is one I particularly enjoyed:
"... here we all, drowning in food and goodies as though to the manna born."
Another clever use of language that kept me on my mental toes was the character named Christ - to rhyme with wrist - I found it impossible to make my brain see Christ and think anything other than the obvious/religious one!


I finished reading this book over the weekend of my 50th birthday, and wondered if there was an omen in the tragic ending - but you will have to read the book yourself to express an opinion as I do not want to spoil the tale. (There is a hint in the picture on the front cover of the book!)

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