The first half of Mystic Pig is rather contemplative, the themes of evil and violence are considered by the main characters each in their own way; the holocaust and racism are major motifs throughout. That is not to say that the first half is at all dry - we are introduced to a world of interesting characters living in New Orleans. Nat is the verging-on alcoholic restauranteur with a secret life, his restaurant is peopled with eccentrics - the Old Queens and Jack/Nick, a man who gets taken over by his own penis, add a dark humour to the novel. Willie, a black child prodigy uses his superior intellect to try and understand the senselessness of the hatred he sees around him every day, while being paid, like a prostitute, to listen to a dying poet's final epic. The philosophical musings in the first half are not at all heavy-handed, rather they are engaging and thought-provoking and a perfect introduction for what is to come.
The reader reaches the half way point in the book, with a vaguely ominous feeling that something bad will happen to one of the main characters. But when the bombshell is dropped, as gently as Katrovas can drop it, it is completely unexpected. The relationship between truth and reality slips, for us as much as for the characters, the reader is forced to re-evaluate the whole book. The Mystic Pig engages with the reader and forces them to ask the very questions that the characters have been grappling with, reminding us all of the frailty of happiness.
This is a really enjoyable, though-provoking book with strong, entertaining characters that definately deserves a second read. Thoroughly recommended.