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Read The Great Pursuit (1999)

The Great Pursuit (1999)

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Rating
3.7 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0879517336 (ISBN13: 9780879517335)
Language
English
Publisher
the overlook press

The Great Pursuit (1999) - Plot & Excerpts

Caustic humor is a long and noble British tradition. What sets Tom Sharpe ahead of the pack is not the depth of his perversion (which is deep enough) or the sheer volume of comic mayhem that he can squeeze into two hundred pages, but that he can make you laugh out loud at the most appalling things, and keep you coming back for more.Part of his secret is that the stories are laced with Awful Truth. It’s hard to conceive that a writer who uses penis mutilation as a recurring motif and whose characters habitually cavort in rubber rooms and sex-toy factories might have something important to say. Sharpe is driven by a deep-seated anger at the system, and it’s the anger that powers the black extremes of his humor.The other part of his secret is harder to express in a short recommendation: because, yes, the books are charming in a sick adult sort of way, and this charm of style seldom fails even when Sharpe is describing (in his South African series Indecent Exposure and Riotous Assembly) the efforts of white Afrikaners to eliminate black Africans by raping black women, or (in The Throwback) the efforts of a young man to hang onto his inheritance by having his dead grandfather stuffed and wired for sound. Look, I don’t expect you to believe me: read the books and find out for yourselves. Reading Tom Sharpe is a test of character — try him and see if you pass.THE GREAT PURSUIT is the most benign of his books -- and has some wonderful things to say about the publishing industry.

The story of a publisher, Frensic, who convinces an unimaginative would-be author, Peter Piper, to pretend authorship of a wildly successful, pornographic novel. I first read this about 13 years ago. It’s a funny book, though not riotously so. Its plot is devious and twisted, but though there’s sex and a riot and some explosions, it seems restrained compared to (what I remember of) other Sharpe books. I must say I don’t care much for the ending --- Frensic’s penultimate defeat at the hands of a religious fanatic’s smug self-righteousness is grating for a start (I like the better guy to win), especially since her forcing him to sign a confession is rather weak, as he could safely deny everything once back in London, given how much evidence he had to the contrary.

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