Review
'Sir, a rat, or other small animal, eats of a consecrated wafer. Does he ingest the Real Body, or does he not? If he does not, what has become of it? If he does, what is to be done with him? Yours faithfully, Martin Ignatius Mackenzie (Author of The Chartered Accountant's Saturday Night).' It's a pity Beckett is known mostly for Waiting for Godot and very little for his novels for which, after all, he won the Nobel Prize for literature. Contriving to combine the romping and the elegaic in a bizarre dramatization of what it means to have a questing mind in a world with no answers, Watt is an excellent place for the uninitiated to start. Review by Tim Parks, whose books include 'Adultery and Other Diversions' (Kirkus UK)
Book Description
Watt was the beginning of Samuel Beckett's post-war literary
career, the fruition of his years spent in hiding from the Gestapo in the
Vaucluse mountains, which also largely inspired "Waiting for Godot".
Despite these circumstances, 'Watt' remains, unlike the work that followed
it, extremely Irish - a philosophical novel full of the grim humour that
was already his trade-mark in such earlier fictions as "More Pricks Than
Kicks" and "Murphy".
The preambulations of 'Watt', especially in the home of the eccentric Mr.
Knott, and the sketching of logic to elicit meaning, must be among the most
comic inventions of modern literature.
First published by the libertine Olympia Press in 1953 it has established
itself as one of the most quoted and best-loved of Beckett's novels. The
typographical oddities and omissions are as Beckett left the text.
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