You'd hope off the back of a recent film that the sales of this undoubtedly great book would go up- unfortunately, due to the dismal advertising of said film adaptation, I don't think Bateman's going to be set up for life just yet.
Nevertheless, that says nothing for the quality of the book. It is both fast paced and humourous, mainly due to the lead character, Dan Starkey, who is both touchingly useless and wilfully incapable of stopping the flow of cynical one-liners. The pen may not be mightier than the sword, but it is certainly funnier.
For those that have seen the film, the political points are not so stated, but the sheer human value of it should make you think just what is behind all those news reports you see on the TV. Bateman never lets us forget that, despite the gags, there is tragedy involved in violence, whatever it is in the name of. He shows a side of Northern Ireland that you rarely get to see, unless you visit, one of normal people trying to get on with their lives. That his characters must get sucked into this only provides him with the opportunity to stick two fingers up to those that threaten any precarious equilibrium.
Buy this book- it has more to it than you might first suspect, and there's no harm in having a laugh while you think a bit. Whether or not the irreverant Bateman would admit to such an aim, however, we shall never know. He'd probably just like the cash.