Friday, February 14, 2020

Kirkus-Style Review


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Title: A Confederacy of Dunces | Author: John Kennedy Toole
Pub Date: 1980 | Page Count: 404 | ISBN: 978-0-80-213020-4 | Publisher: Grove Weidenfeld


A dizzying, increasingly absurd romp around 1960s New Orleans, A Confederacy of Dunces follows the exploits of Ignatius J. Reilly through odd jobs, failed uprisings, and countless pilfered hot dogs.

Originally published twenty years posthumously, John Kennedy Toole attempts to wedge every social and cultural taboo into 400 pages, beginning with his debatably comedic and insufferable protagonist. Ignatius J. Reilly, a fussy, arrogant, incompetent ex-graduate student, finds himself experiencing his first consequence after indirectly causing his mother to wreck their car. She then insists he find a job to pay for the damage, requiring him to take intermittent pauses from composing his manifesto. This leads to a parade of terribly mismatched jobs, from file clerking at Levy Pants (“perhaps the most disreputable office that he had ever entered”- where he is fired for staging a failed revolt) to manning a hot dog cart (where he eats more hot dogs than he sells). These episodes are interspersed with scenes from the Night of Joy, a seedy, perpetually vacant “glorify cathouse.” Burma Jones, Night of Joy custodian and handyman, alternates between cursing his boss Lana Lee and attempting to sabotage her shady dealings. By the end of the book, these seemingly disjointed storylines converge in a way that would seem far-fetched if not for the book’s already bizarre nature. Dunces is equal parts character study and preposterous farce. Reilly defines this book through his misanthropic eccentricity, although his eccentricity is demonstrated almost entirely through his fatness (“fat bum” “fat white freak” “fat bastard” “Fatty Arbuckle” etc.). This portrayal is not only offensive to fat people, but his characterization itself is completely unhinged from anything in the real world. Then again, nothing in this book shares any semblance to the real world.

Rambling, humorless, and needlessly edgy, the fact that this book won a Pulitzer is, in Ignatius’s words, “an egregious insult to good taste.”

4 comments:

  1. Susan, this book is phenomenal! It is do hard to describe this book to people because Ignatius bizarre, and the plot is so convoluted, but I think your review is very well done. Everyone should read this book!

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  2. Wow, what a book!! How did you ever manage to get through it? You did a great job reviewing it and your words along with the quotes you mention definitely makes me want to steer clear of this. Great job!

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  3. I've never read this book, but I feel like I need to. If he eats more hot dogs than he sells it'll be just like experiencing my favorite parts of Arrested Development when George Michael and cousin Maeby think they can throw bananas away and take money from the banana stand. (I've always wanted Arrested Development as a book, and this may be a close as I get!)

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  4. WOW!!!!! Your final line is PERFECTION! I read this book a few years ago and had a hard time with the absurdity of it all. You magically summarized it (better than I ever could have attempted) and used the books own theme to insult it in the end of the review. Seriously amazing. Full points and kudos for reading this book. I don't know if I'm not smart enough for it or what, but maybe I'll attempt this one again in a few decades!

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