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The Butt
 
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The Butt [Hardcover]

Will Self
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Review

PRAISE FOR 'THE BOOK OF DAVE' 'Extraordinary brilliant and engaging ... tender and strange' Philip Hensher, Spectator 'Dazzling and hilarious' Time Out 'His most imaginative, most dazzling and most moving book yet' Rick Moody, Esquire

Review

'The Butt is Self's most gripping and disturbing novel in years' Harper's Bazaar 'With a flick of a cigarette Will Self performs literary acrobatics few other writers can even dream of' Scotland on Sunday 'A writer at the height of his immeasurable powers' Yorkshire Post 'Self writes here with an adroit impersonation of coarse exuberance that makes The Butt as readable as a blokeish airport novel ... Ingenious' Sunday Telegraph --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

Tom Brodzinski is a man who takes his own good intentions for granted. But when he finally decides to give up smoking, a moment's inattention to detail becomes his undoing. Flipping the butt of his final cigarette off the balcony of the holiday apartment he's renting with his family, Tom is appalled when it lands on the head of one his fellow countrymen, Reggie Lincoln. The elderly Lincoln is badly burnt, and since the cigarette butt passed through public space before hitting him, the local authorities are obliged to regard Tom's action as an assault, despite his benign intentions. Worse is to follow: Lincoln is married to a native from one of the rigorous, mystical tribes of the desert interior, and their customary law is incorporated into the civil statute. In order to make reparations to Mrs Lincoln's people, Tom will have to leave his family behind, and carry the appropriate goods and chattels deep into the arid heart of this strange, island continent. Any of this might be bearable, were it not for Tom's companion, forced on him by his enigmatic lawyer, the mixed-race Jethro Swai-Phillips. Brian Prentice, like Tom, has to make reparations and although there is a taboo that prevents either man from knowing the exact detail of the other's offence, Tom's almost 100% certain that he's a child-abuser. As they drive into the desert and encounter a violent counter-insurgency war that Tom has allowed himself to remain in ignorance of, the relationship between the two men becomes one of complicit guilt as well as seething mistrust. Refusing facile moral certitudes, Will Self's latest novel is set in a distorted world, in a country that is part Australia, part Iraq, part Greeneland and part the heart of a distinctively modern darkness.

About the Author

Will Self is the author of The Quantity Theory of Insanity, shortlisted for the 1992 John Llewellyn Rhys Memorial Prize and winner of the 1993 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, and How the Dead Live, which was shortlisted for the Whitbread Novel of the Year 2002. His latest book, Psychogeography, a collection of his columns for the Independent, was published in September 2007. He lives in London.
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