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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Imaginative, original, atmospheric - take a trip to Fulcrum, 18 Jan 2005
You may not have heard of Chris Bell, but take my word for it, his first novel is well worth risking a tenner on. On the face of it, Liquidambar is a "gumshoe" novel in the finest tradition of Farewell, My Lovely and The Big Sleep, but the hero's sharp suit and classic car and the molls and heavies he follows (and who follow him) are where its resemblance to any detective novel you've ever read before ends.Liquidambar is an imaginative tour-de-force, plunging a going-nowhere modern-day journalist into a surreal parallel universe of Edward Hopper's paintings. The town of Fulcrum, frozen in smalltown 1930s America, may itself be going nowhere, but Typo finds more action there than he ever did back in the "real" world, falling in love with the redhead from Summertime, being beaten up by hoods from Nighthawks and finding himself drawn into the lonesome life of the woman drinking coffee alone in the late-night Automat. If you like Hopper and Raymond Chandler - and, really, who doesn't? - this novel will be an enjoyable and absorbing experience. It's original, certainly unpredictable, beautifully written and cleverly structured. With its several creepy and rather pervy characters (including, notably, a cross-dressing mob boss), it's got all the makings of a cult novel, and would make a superb film along the lines of Blue Velvet and Repo Man. British author Chris Bell stays true to his concept (and, most importantly, to Edward Hopper) throughout the novel as well as to his many other artistic, literary, cinematic and musical influences - nods are made along the way to artists as diverse as Steely Dan, David Lynch and Russell Hoban. The book is littered with nice lines. Some of the many I noted down while reading include: "He's in my face quicker than you can say blackhead." "You close your head, you boob, or I might just play you some chin music!" "She looks about twenty and is as delicately put together as a fine watch." I did find a couple of sections overlong, but other scenes, such as one in which Typo finally tracks down his elusive dream woman on a train and they drink each other under the table while trying to find out the truth about each other, and another chapter in which her estranged husband Reagan meets an icy end at the hands of the mob, were so gripping and absorbing I didn't notice the pages turning. As a first novel this is an excellent piece of work, and I really hope it's the first of many from Chris Bell.
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