Tuesday, May 14, 2013
BOOK DEVIL REVIEW OF THE RAPIST
From Book Devil on Tumblr:
I doubt
the term “philosophical crime novel” is something writers that write about
crime writers sling about much, but the phrase is definitely and defiantly
apropos of Les Edgerton’s THE RAPIST. The book is most assuredly a crime novel
and so readers shouldn’t be frightened away by a description that makes it
sound dangerously like a tome and frighteningly unlike a book, say, a highly
readable but mightily singular piece of crime fiction. While THE RAPIST belongs
on the shelf next to Dostoyevsky and the like, it also sits snugly and
comfortably besides the gritty, bleak likes of Jim Thompson. Take some
Thompson, a generous cupful, mix it with the brutal, barren cynicism of Jerzy
Kosinski, then run it through a filter of Camus, finishing with a big chunk of
Nietzsche’s attitude. Yeah, it’s got “existentialist” written all over it and
flirts dangerously with the blurry line betwixt sociopathology and the mind of
the ubermensch. Again, I’m scaring you. This is a lean crime novel, vastly more
readable than the cumbersome Dostoyevsky. It’s all told directly to you from
the central and, with fleeting exceptions, the only character, the rapist
himself. The reader gets an unsettling time spent inside the head of a sociopath.
It’s a heady experience. While the prose does at times try too hard to be
proper and arrogant, THE RAPIST is a cunningly written piece of brain-shock
prose. There’s even twist at the end, but it’s unlike any twist you’ve ever
encountered in a strictly traditional crime novel. That I can promise you.
That, and a terrific read.
142 pp.
Thanks!
Blue skies,
Les
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
nice reading.
Insurance blog
Post a Comment