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The Nothing Man (2014)

The Nothing Man (2014)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.79 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
0316404012 (ISBN13: 9780316404013)
Language
English
Publisher
mulholland books

About book The Nothing Man (2014)

Thompson is one of the unsung greats of the crime genre in his time who has gained popularity in the 80s and since and had numerous novels adapted for film with great success. He was pushing the boundaries of violence and the portrayal of alcohol addiction by the mid 50s when this was published, far superseding the luminaries who influenced him originally (Hammett, Chandler). This book is no exception, featuring a lead character who believes alcohol has no effect on him, while living his life in a near permanent state of blackout, unable to accurately perceive reality and deluding himself that he has the upper hand over everyone with whom he is associated. Thompson writes better than almost anyone in the genre, offering nuggets of historical and sociological import regarding such topics as poverty, race, government corruption and the encroaching fascism that said governments are now adopting wholesale. The plot is somewhat convoluted at first, not the sort of deft writing that merely hides details and reveals facts slowly, and the reader will be quite confused. Ultimately, those confusing plots points--did he lose his genitals in the war? were there several blackmail plots at play?--are weakly resolved and given no pat answer, though the book does have a somewhat startling conclusion regarding the main character and his primary foil.It may not be the best example of Thompson's work due to those issues with coherency, but his characters and style more than make up for those lapses.

I really enjoy Thompson, but. man, he can put you through the wringer. His protagonists are just so flat-out im- or at least amoral that the reading can be, well, uncomfortable. This book is no exception, with a war-wounded dissolute and embittered newspaperman, whose rage at the world is taken out on all those around him - ex-wife, colleagues, chief of police, etc. The characters are good, and even if not likeable are enjoyable. There's a real sense of place and period... it's a good, engaging, slightly idiosyncratic noir.Thompson does a good job of keeping you just off balance - whenever you think you know on where it's all going to land up he just knocks you a different way. This has some lighter moments compared with other Thompson novels, and in the end the misanthropy is somewhat, well, evened-up, so long as you don't take it too seriously. And in the end I think that's the one niggle I have - other Thompson novels seem serious, weighty. This one I had to take a little less seriously in order to enjoy it.

Do You like book The Nothing Man (2014)?

The Nothing Man reads like a fraternal twin of The Killer Inside Me in which Lou Ford is an alcoholic newspaperman rather than a sheriff. Like Ford, The Nothing Man's narrator Clinton Brown is deeply damaged, but in a different way. Whereas Ford suffers from psychosexual personality disorders, Brown suffers psychologically because of a physical injury - his penis was blown off in the war (hence the title: The No-thing Man) and no one else knows about Brown's condition except his former commanding officer who is now, awkwardly, his boss and editor at the paper. Like Ford again, Brown endures his impotence, takes his inward suffering and redirects it outwardly in the form of passive-aggressive bullying that escalates all the way to violent murder. The Nothing Man features a demimonde of flawed characters, a plot filled with gasp-inducing twists and revelations, and some of Thompson's strongest prose. It's also a book engaged in a dark philosophy whose chief inquiry seems to be what is life worth when something as essential as one's sexual being has been obliterated. It is a pulp novel that takes the idea of nothingness as seriously as a Russian novel would. While not quite on the level of The Killer Inside Me, The Nothing Man deserves to be considered among Thompson's very best work.
—Kenneth

Took a while to get going, and I wanted to quit several times during those 40 pages, but I kept on, because I've tried to read a couple other Thompson novels and couldn't finish them, and I wanted to at least finish one of his novels, given all the hype surrounding this guy. This was okay, it was a chore to read at times, but around page 40 it sucked me in and I vowed to finish it. The good parts were few and far in between, the narrator not that likeable. The book felt longer than it needed to be, the narrator just droning on and on. Not a book I can recommend, but it had its moments.
—Stunatra

This novel surprised me. I had never heard of it before, having only come across it in a three-novel compilation that I picked up for three dollars in a used bookstore in Boston. About halfway through, it was starting to seem like the protagonist's murders were rather gratuitous, not unlike those which soured me on Thompson's revered The Killer Inside Me. But then the ending hits, and suddenly the book is not what it had seemed. Clifton Brown is indeed a nothing man, not really existing as his own self but instead living through manipulating and tormenting others. He thinks he's winning the game, but as it turns out he's been losing all along. And the local sheriff will see to it that he continues to do so, denying him the grand exit he desires.
—Peter

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