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Lionel Asbo

State of England
Mar 12, 2013jmikesmith rated this title 3 out of 5 stars
I have never read Martin Amis before. I'd like to read more, because this author is a master wordsmith. The pictures he draws with his writing are a joy to read. If only the story were as joyful. This is the story of Desmond Pepperdine and his uncle, Lionel Asbo. Teenage Desmond has been in his uncle's care since his mother died a few years before the story opens. Lionel is a thug. His occupation appears to be beating people up. Desmond is terrified that Lionel will beat him up, or kill him, if Lionel ever finds out that Desmond had a brief affair with his own grandmother, Lionel's mother. That basic premise drives the somewhat thin plot. Lionel happens to win a major lottery, and the centre part of the book is taken up with the very funny story of how the uneducated thug, who's been in and out of detention and jail since he was 3, deals with suddenly becoming a multi-millionaire. As the story draws to its climax, Amis is able to create a nearly unbearable sense of dread, a feat that is made even more impressive since I was becoming bored with the aimless middle section. Although the plotting is uneven, the writing is astounding. On nearly every page, there is some turn of phrase that makes you read it twice. It is quite remarkable. This is a very English book, and there passages I didn't fully understand because of the English, criminal-class slang. You get the sense of it, but I suspect British readers get more out of it than a Canadian or American would. Amis is one of the cleverest and most interesting writers I've read in a long time. I hope his other works are more pleasant than this tale of mean spirits and family dysfunction.