September 7, 2010 | Rome, Italy | Partly Cloudy, 25°C
Search the archives:
Fiction
Nonfiction
Italy
Bios & Memoirs
History
Politics
Thrillers
Travel&Food
Sports&Leisure
   

Fiction

Love and Obstacles

Aleksandar Hemon started writing English in his 20s. A decade later, he's a master.

Reasons for and Advantages of Breathing

Lydia Peelle spins strange and wonderful magic from America's rural outback.

My Revolutions

Hari Kunzru's attempt to make 60s terrorism relevant suffers from tediousness.

36 Arguments for the Existence of God

Rebecca Newberger Goldstein "fangs" away enjoyably on the subject of God.

Point Omega

Don DeLillo mixes Iraq, Hitchcock, and intimations of doomsday in his dubious Omega brew.

The Stories of Breece D'J Pancake

Pancake's stories continue sparkling long after his death by suicide in 1979.

Monsieur Pain

Bolaño takes his magic and alchemy to prewar Paris.

Any Human Face

Charles Lambert's new novel puts a modest man on a collision course with Italy's dark side.

The Concert Ticket

Olga Grushin confirms her status as one of the best young writers in the English language.

Everything is the Best Thing Ever

In Justin Taylor's first collection, youth is lost in its own space.




BOOK REVIEW
Little Hands Clapping
By Dan Rhodes
Canongate, 2010. 313 pages

In the early 1960s, an American children's show aired a segment called "Fractured Fairy Tales," in which Goldie Locks was slightly less than Goldie and The Three Little Pigs had ulterior motives. Born in 1972, Englishman Rhodes had no occasion to know or watch it but his latest novel walks the same path, borrowing from Grimm, Conan Doyle and Swift at his most scatological. How else to explain a suicide museum, a cannibal doctor, an accent-memorizing custodian who munches on spiders, and an assortment of ancillary characters straight from a sexually-deviant house of horrors?

The wacky Rhodes somehow manages to comfortably and charmingly align suicide, vomit, necrophilia, cannibalism, incest, and all manner of sexual abuse and molestation, punning media sensationalism at will. The story? Let's see. Once upon a time in Germany a woman created a suicide museum to help the despondent change their minds by showing them the details of the end-game (including a photo of Kurt Cobain's leg). But when some of the would-be saved instead chose the museum's rooms to kill themselves, a laconic custodian and a heartbroken doctor engineer a conspiracy, one supplying victims, the other eating them. Meanwhile, in a small town in Portugal, a brother marries sister, an event that will lead to the museum's undoing.

Enough for ghoul-giggling Rhodes? Not in the least. There's Hans, the penis and scrotum-eating (and vomiting) dog; the matter of whether good doctor did in fact have sex with a frozen cat; and just where is that album of malfunctioning anuses? Oh, there's also Hulda, the German Lorena Bobbit.

Little is vulgar because Rhodes is masterfully dead-pan (Of the doctor: "He had never eaten such dark flesh before, and he couldn't help but wondering whether it would taste any different from white. Smokier, perhaps.") If you're going to hunt down and tickle the macabre, why not be outrageous? Rhodes is.