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Jesus' Son: Stories (Picador Modern Classics Book 3) Kindle Edition
American master Denis Johnson's nationally bestselling collection of blistering and indelible tales about America's outcasts and wanderers.
Denis Johnson's now classic story collection Jesus' Son chronicles a wild netherworld of addicts and lost souls, a violent and disordered landscape that encompasses every extreme of American culture. These are stories of transcendence and spiraling grief, of hallucinations and glories, of getting lost and found and lost again. The insights and careening energy in Jesus' Son have earned the book a place of its own among the classics of twentieth-century American literature. It was adapted into a critically-praised film in 1999.
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
The most successful stories in the collection offer moments of startling clarity. In "Car Crash While Hitchhiking," for instance, the narrator feels most alive while in the presence of another's loss: "Down the hall came the wife. She was glorious, burning. She didn't know yet that her husband was dead.... What a pair of lungs! She shrieked as I imagined an eagle would shriek. It felt wonderful to be alive to hear it! I've gone looking for that feeling everywhere." In "Work," while "salvaging" copper wire from a flooded house to fund their habits, the narrator and an acquaintance stop to watch the nearly unfathomable sight of a beautiful, naked woman paragliding up the river. Later the narrator learns that the house once belonged to his down-and-out accomplice and that the woman is his estranged wife. "As nearly as I could tell, I'd wandered into some sort of dream that Wayne was having about his wife, and his house," he reasons. Such is the experience for the reader. More Genet than Bukowski, Denis Johnson lures us into a misfit soul's dream from which he can't awake. --Langdon Cook
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
- Lawrence Rungren, Bedford Free P.L., Mass.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
"A work of spare beauty and almost religious intensity."--Entertainment Weekly
"Intense, vicious, and beautiful, these stories are fraught with a cutting wit purposefully juxtaposed against the too-big sentimentality of a drunk. Denis Johnson is an exquisite writer."--Mary Gaitskill
"[Dennis Johnson is] a synthesizer of profoundly American voices: we can hear Twain in his biting irony, Whitman in his erotic excess, not a little of Dashiell Hammett too in the hard sentences he throws back at his gouged, wounded world. And behind all these you sense something else: a visionary angel, a Kerouac, or, better yet, a Blake, who has seen his demon and yearned for God and forged a language to contain them both."--Newsday
"Ferocious intensity. . . . No American novelist since William Burroughs has so flagrantly risked 'insensitivity' in an effort to depict the pathology of addiction."--The New York Times Book Review
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Jesus' Son
StoriesBy Denis JohnsonPicador
Copyright © 2009 Denis JohnsonAll right reserved.
ISBN: 9780312428747
Jesus' Son
Car Crash While HitchhikingA salesman who shared his liquor and steered while sleeping ... A Cherokee filled with bourbon ... A VW no more than a bubble of hashish fumes, captained by a college student ...And a family from Marshalltown who headonned and killed forever a man driving west out of Bethany, Missouri ...... I rose up sopping wet from sleeping under the pouring rain, and something less than conscious, thanks to the first three of the people I've already named--the salesman and the Indian and the student--all of whom had given me drugs. At the head of the entrance ramp I waited without hope of a ride. What was the point, even, of rolling up my sleeping bag when I was too wet to be let into anybody's car? I draped it around me like a cape. The downpour raked the asphalt and gurgled in the ruts. My thoughts zoomed pitifully. The travelling salesman had fed me pills that made the linings of my veins feel scraped out. My jaw ached. I knew every raindrop by its name. I sensed everything before it happened. I knew a certain Oldsmobile would stop for me even before it slowed, and by the sweet voices of the family inside it I knew we'd have an accident in the storm.I didn't care. They said they'd take me all the way.The man and the wife put the little girl up front with them and left the baby in back with me and my dripping bedroll. "I'm not taking you anywhere very fast," the man said. "I've got my wife and babies here, that's why."You are the ones, I thought. And I piled my sleeping bag against the left-hand door and slept across it, not caring whether I lived or died. The baby slept free on the seat beside me. He was about nine months old.... But before any of this, that afternoon, the salesman and I had swept down into Kansas City in his luxury car. We'd developed a dangerous cynical camaraderie beginning in Texas, where he'd taken me on. We ate up his bottle of amphetamines, and every so often we pulled off the Interstate and bought another pint of Canadian Club and a sack of ice. His car had cylindrical glass holders attached to either door and a white, leathery interior. He said he'd take me home to stay overnight with his family, but first he wanted to stop and see a woman he knew.Under Midwestern clouds like great grey brains we left the superhighway with a drifting sensation and entered Kansas City's rush hour with a sensation of running aground. As soon as we slowed down, all the magic of travelling together burned away. He went on and on about his girlfriend. "I like this girl, I think I love this girl--but I've got two kids and a wife, and there's certain obligations there. And on top of everything else, I love my wife. I'm gifted with love. I love my kids. I love all my relatives." As he kept on, I felt jilted and sad: "I have a boat, a little sixteen-footer. I have two cars. There's room in the back yard for a swimming pool." Hefound his girlfriend at work. She ran a furniture store, and I lost him there.The clouds stayed the same until night. Then, in the dark, I didn't see the storm gathering. The driver of the Volkswagen, a college man, the one who stoked my head with all the hashish, let me out beyond the city limits just as it began to rain. Never mind the speed I'd been taking, I was too overcome to stand up. I lay out in the grass off the exit ramp and woke in the middle of a puddle that had filled up around me.And later, as I've said, I slept in the back seat while the Oldsmobile--the family from Marshalltown--splashed along through the rain. And yet I dreamed I was looking right through my eyelids, and my pulse marked off the seconds of time. The Interstate through western Missouri was, in that era, nothing more than a two-way road, most of it. When a semi truck came toward us and passed going the other way, we were lost in a blinding spray and a warfare of noises such as you get being towed through an automatic car wash. The wipers stood up and lay down across the windshield without much effect. I was exhausted, and after an hour I slept more deeply.I'd known all along exactly what was going to happen. But the man and his wife woke me up later, denying it viciously."Oh--no!""NO!"I was thrown against the back of their seat so hard that it broke. I commenced bouncing back and forth. A liquid which I knew right away was human blood flew around thecar and rained down on my head. When it was over I was in the back seat again, just as I had been. I rose up and looked around. Our headlights had gone out. The radiator was hissing steadily. Beyond that, I didn't hear a thing. As far as I could tell, I was the only one conscious. As my eyes adjusted I saw that the baby was lying on its back beside me as if nothing had happened. Its eyes were open and it was feeling its cheeks with its little hands.In a minute the driver, who'd been slumped over the wheel, sat up and peered at us. His face was smashed and dark with blood. It made my teeth hurt to look at him--but when he spoke, it didn't sound as if any of his teeth were broken."What happened?""We had a wreck," he said."The baby's okay," I said, although I had no idea how the baby was.He turned to his wife."Janice," he said. "Janice, Janice!""Is she okay?""She's dead!" he said, shaking her angrily."No, she's not." I was ready to deny everything myself now.Their little girl was alive, but knocked out. She whimpered in her sleep. But the man went on shaking his wife."Janice!" he hollered.His wife moaned."She's not dead," I said, clambering from the car and running away."She won't wake up," I heard him say.I was standing out here in the night, with the baby, for some reason, in my arms. It must have still been raining, but I remember nothing about the weather. We'd collided with another car on what I now perceived was a two-lane bridge. The water beneath us was invisible in the dark.Moving toward the other car I began to hear rasping, metallic snores. Somebody was flung halfway out the passenger door, which was open, in the posture of one hanging from a trapeze by his ankles. The car had been broadsided, smashed so flat that no room was left inside it even for this person's legs, to say nothing of a driver or any other passengers. I just walked right on past.Headlights were coming from far off. I made for the head of the bridge, waving them to a stop with one arm and clutching the baby to my shoulder with the other.It was a big semi, grinding its gears as it decelerated. The driver rolled down his window and I shouted up at him, "There's a wreck. Go for help.""I can't turn around here," he said.He let me and the baby up on the passenger side, and we just sat there in the cab, looking at the wreckage in his headlights."Is everybody dead?" he asked."I can't tell who is and who isn't," I admitted.He poured himself a cup of coffee from a thermos and switched off all but his parking lights."What time is it?""Oh, it's around quarter after three," he said.By his manner he seemed to endorse the idea of not doing anything about this. I was relieved and tearful. I'dthought something was required of me, but I hadn't wanted to find out what it was.When another car showed coming in the opposite direction, I thought I should talk to them. "Can you keep the baby?" I asked the truck driver."You'd better hang on to him," the driver said. "It's a boy, isn't it?""Well, I think so," I said.The man hanging out of the wrecked car was still alive as I passed, and I stopped, grown a little more used to the idea now of how really badly broken he was, and made sure there was nothing I could do. He was snoring loudly and rudely. His blood bubbled out of his mouth with every breath. He wouldn't be taking many more. I knew that, but he didn't, and therefore I looked down into the great pity of a person's life on this earth. I don't mean that we all end up dead, that's not the great pity. I mean that he couldn't tell me what he was dreaming, and I couldn't tell him what was real.Before too long there were cars backed up for a ways at either end of the bridge, and headlights giving a night-game atmosphere to the steaming rubble, and ambulances and cop cars nudging through so that the air pulsed with color. I didn't talk to anyone. My secret was that in this short while I had gone from being the president of this tragedy to being a faceless onlooker at a gory wreck. At some point an officer learned that I was one of the passengers, and took my statement. I don't remember any of this, except that he told me, "Put out your cigarette." We paused in our conversation to watch the dying man being loaded into the ambulance. Hewas still alive, still dreaming obscenely. The blood ran off him in strings. His knees jerked and his head rattled.There was nothing wrong with me, and I hadn't seen anything, but the policeman had to question me and take me to the hospital anyway. The word came over his car radio that the man was now dead, just as we came under the awning of the emergency-room entrance.I stood in a tiled corridor with my wet sleeping bag bunched against the wall beside me, talking to a man from the local funeral home.The doctor stopped to tell me I'd better have an X-ray."No.""Now would be the time. If something turns up later ...""There's nothing wrong with me."Down the hall came the wife. She was glorious, burning. She didn't know yet that her husband was dead. We knew. That's what gave her such power over us. The doctor took her into a room with a desk at the end of the hall, and from under the closed door a slab of brilliance radiated as if, by some stupendous process, diamonds were being incinerated in there. What a pair of lungs! She shrieked as I imagined an eagle would shriek. It felt wonderful to be alive to hear it! I've gone looking for that feeling everywhere."There's nothing wrong with me"--I'm surprised I let those words out. But it's always been my tendency to lie to doctors, as if good health consisted only of the ability to fool them.Some years later, one time when I was admitted to the Detox at Seattle General Hospital, I took the same tack."Are you hearing unusual sounds or voices?" the doctor asked."Help us, oh God, it hurts," the boxes of cotton screamed.B!"Not exactly," I said."Not exactly," he said. "Now, what does that mean?""I'm not ready to go into all that," I said. A yellow bird fluttered close to my face, and my muscles grabbed. Now I was flopping like a fish. When I squeezed shut my eyes, hot tears exploded from the sockets. When I opened them, I was on my stomach."How did the room get so white?" I asked.A beautiful nurse was touching my skin. "These are vitamins," she said, and drove the needle in.It was raining. Gigantic ferns leaned over us. The forest drifted down a hill. I could hear a creek rushing down among rocks. And you, you ridiculous people, you expect me to help you.JESUS' SON. Copyright © 1992 by Denis Johnson. All rights reserved. For information, address Picador, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
Continues...
Excerpted from Jesus' Son by Denis Johnson Copyright © 2009 by Denis Johnson. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B006JR7XLC
- Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 1st edition (October 13, 2009)
- Publication date : October 13, 2009
- Language : English
- File size : 945 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 144 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #84,922 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #84 in U.S. Short Stories
- #702 in Contemporary Literary Fiction
- #1,068 in Single Authors Short Stories
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Denis Hale Johnson (born July 1, 1949) is an American writer best known for his short story collection Jesus' Son (1992) and his novel Tree of Smoke (2007), which won the National Book Award for Fiction. He also writes plays, poetry and non-fiction.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers praise the book's writing quality, with one noting how deliberate each word is, and appreciate its high-order storytelling that interlocks in ingenious ways. The book is hilarious from beginning to end, with one customer highlighting a particularly memorable emergency room sequence, and customers find the characters real and engaging. While customers find the style unique and appreciate the message, with one describing it as a workshop for the soul, the pacing receives criticism for being depressing and not terribly uplifting. The emotional impact is mixed, with some finding it heartfelt while others describe it as painful.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, finding it interesting and poetic, with one customer noting the deliberate use of each word.
"...Theirs is a mixed-up, shook-up world, and it is brilliantly rendered by Johnson...." Read more
"I loved each and every story. Such great, gritty, gut-punch writing. Fantastic!" Read more
"...The writing is great, but in the end it only hints of the possibility of growing to something larger. I rate this book 6/10." Read more
"...That ability is what makes this such a great read. The ability to pull back and let the reader imagine the rest...." Read more
Customers praise the quality of the stories in the book, describing them as interesting and captivating, with one customer noting how they interlock in ingenious ways.
"I loved each and every story. Such great, gritty, gut-punch writing. Fantastic!" Read more
"This book is a series of short stories, which share a protagonist and form a larger picture of his life...." Read more
"...Mr.Johnson was on to something worthy. Downbeat stories like following the stations of the cross for addicts. Worth more visits." Read more
"...the characters or packing in unnecessary detail making for a interesting read." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's humor, finding it oddly humorous and heartbreaking, with one customer highlighting a particularly funny emergency room sequence.
"...cautionary tale you won't forget and it's also a moving, sometimes oddly humorous, testimony to the strength of the human spirit seemingly against..." Read more
"...Truly inspired writing. It was a pleasure to consume pure greatness from beginning to end. One of the most clever prose stylists I've ever read...." Read more
"...It is a romp, and full of energy and drive. Johnson provides humor, pathos, and interlocks the stories in ingenious ways...." Read more
"...Theme is drug addiction, alcoholism and recovery. Very funny emergency room sequence which I liked, I am a physician...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's message, describing it as inventive and fresh, with one customer noting its exploration of interior life and another highlighting its portrayal of a subculture.
"...The ability to pull back and let the reader imagine the rest...." Read more
"...to see through to the world he's creating and that's a unique way of setting up a world...." Read more
"...challenge the Reader to meet the author where he is and engage with these challenging pieces." Read more
"...it's about drugs, addiction, failure - unpleasant stuff - and it's ambiguous, discontinuous, not a novel with a start, middle and end...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's style, describing it as unique and different, with one customer noting it is stripped of pretense.
"...real as "Fat City", but it is among the most powerful and original books of (relatively) contemporary American literature that I have read...." Read more
"...Doesn't matter though. It's poetic, without being pretentious. Without being too abstract...." Read more
"...Yet, throughout the book, Johnson rewards us with his minimal style and his poetic imagery...." Read more
"...language and not-so-easy-to-discuss topics, Jesus' Son is definitely a unique and captivating book!" Read more
Customers praise the character development in the book, noting that the characters are so real, with one customer mentioning how each story brought them along with the characters.
"Great book! Wonderful flawed characters! The audible version is a great listen too" Read more
"I like Denis Johnson’s style. The characters are very realistic, even if most of them are a little damaged. The stories are dark...." Read more
"The characters were so real they sewed flat. I read on a night. Like snooping in someone's journal. Still, it was entertaining enough" Read more
"Enjoyed very much. The stories were deep and rich, full of characters with various issues (drugs, alcohol, poor)...." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the heartfeltness of the book, with some finding it heartfelt while others describe it as painful.
"...be grossed out by their condition while still seeing their humanity with great sympathy." Read more
"...These stories, just writing this review, leaves me with a dull ache in my heart and a knot in my throat...." Read more
"Denis Johnson writes like a sharpened razor. It feel good as long as it's running smooth and gives you a gentle babyface...." Read more
"Brilliant, jarring writing. Disturbing and unpleasant to experience this novel/ series of short connected stories was hard toe joy but masterfully..." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book negative, describing the stories as depressing, sad, and hopeless, with one customer noting the disconnected narrative structure.
"...The book's overall theme is very gritty.. and I think I can only tolerate so much grit and depravity in one sitting...." Read more
"...And at times, it feels incomplete, like there was something more to say. Like he cut off the story just as it got interesting...." Read more
"...But with no chemicals coursing through my veins, these stories are merely depressing...." Read more
"...A lot of the characters are nonsensical, thoughtful, but that doesn't make them unbelievable. In fact it makes them that much more believable...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2015About a month ago I read a piece in "The New York Times" by Matt Bell that lauded JESUS' SON as a "looming influence" on him as a writer. In the article, Bell tells of how another book had had a similar looming influence on Denis Johnson, the author of JESUS' SON -- namely, "Fat City" by Leonard Gardner. That snagged my attention, because when I read "Fat City" a few years ago I was wowed by it and I continue to think of it as one of the most underappreciated novels in American literature. (New York Review Books recently published a new edition of "Fat City", which should help bring it a wider readership.) The roundabout association of "Fat City" with JESUS' SON was enough for me to read the latter. And I am very glad I did. It may not be quite as starkly real as "Fat City", but it is among the most powerful and original books of (relatively) contemporary American literature that I have read. ("Relatively" because it was published twenty-three years ago.)
The title is taken from the Lou Reed song, "Heroin": "When I'm rushing on my run / And I feel just like Jesus' Son * * *." All eleven stories of JESUS' SON are marinated to some extent in alcohol or drugs, including heroin. More broadly, they all feature the by-passed of America, the people who have fled from mainstream society or been shunned or shunted aside by it, the people neither the Democrats nor the Republicans try to reach because they simply don't matter (nor do they vote). Theirs is a mixed-up, shook-up world, and it is brilliantly rendered by Johnson. The stories struck me as somewhat like the prose equivalents of the poems of Baudelaire's "Les Fleurs du mal".
The stories, or their plots, are rather mundane, though they can be weird as an Hieronymus Bosch hell. For example, in "Emergency" the first-person narrator (all eleven are told in the first person) goes off driving on his break between shifts with his emergency room co-worker Georgie, who runs over a rabbit; Georgie backs up and hops out with the idea of skinning and dressing the rabbit for food with the hunting knife that he had removed from the head of an ER patient a few hours earlier, but then discovers that the rabbit was pregnant, so he brings back to the truck "slimy miniature bunnies", exclaiming "with a look of glory on his face", "We killed the mother and saved the children." (At the end of the story, Georgie and the narrator pick up a hitchhiker who is AWOL and fleeing to Canada; he asks Georgie what he does for a job; Georgie says, "I save lives.")
Others have written about ennui and Jesus' Son, but few if any have told the story with such literary chops. Here are three excerpts:
* "That night I sat in a booth across from Kid Williams, a former boxer. * * * He'd wasted his entire life. Such people were very dear to us who'd wasted only a few years. With Kid Williams sitting across from you it was nothing to contemplate going on like this for another month or two."
* "The day was sunny, unusual for the Northwest Coast. I'm sure we were all feeling blessed on this ferryboat among the humps of very green--in the sunlight almost coolly burning, like phosphorus--islands, and the water of inlets winking in the sincere light of day, under a sky as blue and brainless as the love of God * * *."
* "I pushed through the door into Kelly's. Inside they sat with their fat hands around their beers while the jukebox sang softly to itself. You'd think they'd found out how, by sitting still and holding their necks just so, to look down into lost worlds."
- Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2017Some of the stories (linked stories) in this book are very, very good. Others seem lackluster. I read this book (160 pp) in the space of 3-4 hours one afternoon. I'm wondering, however, whether the book may have been more enjoyable had I read it over a longer period of time. The book's overall theme is very gritty.. and I think I can only tolerate so much grit and depravity in one sitting. I've actually found this to be true of other short stories -- Flannery O'Connor's writings especially -- where the linked stories become increasingly burdensome to read because of the grittiness of the theme and/or the depravity of the characters. Indeed, Johnson's book reminds me somewhat of O'Connor's short stories -- just a different place & time and different life challenges for the characters.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2024I loved each and every story. Such great, gritty, gut-punch writing. Fantastic!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2025Great book! Wonderful flawed characters! The audible version is a great listen too
- Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2018This book is a series of short stories, which share a protagonist and form a larger picture of his life. Some equate it to a novel, but it does not have the over-arching narrative structure of one. Not all of the short stories are equal. Some are shorter, some longer, and some more able to stand on their own. As an overall story, it shows a drugged out man eventually looking for redemption. The book is too realistic about his life, too honest, to end with his happiness, but he is finally at least on that path.
The writing is poetic at times, gusting out in sentences too beautiful for the reality they describe. The language shows the world the unnamed main character experiences through the filter of his drug-altered state, instead of describing the affects of the various drugs themselves. The focus is not on the alteration but the reality, or seeming reality, of the alternatives the substances cause him to create. It may not be real, but this garbled, sideways perception is true to the main character. He describes it as he knew it, and he does not attempt to explain or excuse the impossible or the horrible. He shows himself honestly, in his lowest moments and his highest (pun intended). He never blames the drugs for his actions, or acknowledges their part. He is seen drinking, but he never says the drink had made such and such appear like so. After all, he is the one who took the drink, the drugs. This honesty with what the main character experienced allows the reader to go more deeply into the story, to embody the events without the distracting constant reminders of how warped they are.
This book is not a novel. It shows drug-filtered perception without emphasizing the drug part, a unique spin. The writing is great, but in the end it only hints of the possibility of growing to something larger. I rate this book 6/10.
Top reviews from other countries
- Daniel Figueiredo Alves da SilvaReviewed in Brazil on June 16, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Darker than night
Very dark, but very real! This is not your usual bedtime reading book, but a complex story that keeps you interested all the time.
- Avid ReaderReviewed in India on March 27, 2016
1.0 out of 5 stars The writing is very crappy. Could not make head or tail out of ...
Bought this book on some recommendations I read over the internet. The writing is very crappy. Could not make head or tail out of it. Not worth the buy.
- Jason PrestonReviewed in Canada on October 16, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Absorbing Read
I'm not a big fan of short stories, but this is a work of art.
- RebeccaReviewed in Australia on October 4, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars "Disturbing yet eerily beautiful"
There’s a review of this book on Goodreads that starts “I once fell in love with a man just because he recommended this book to me” so, of course, when it was recommended to me, I just had to read it. This is a collection of short stories that are interconnected through a common but nameless narrator. There are so, so many memorable passages that I stopped to re-read and make note of, making it a longer read than it could have been, but nonetheless it was fast and attention-grabbing. I devoured it in two sittings. It’s a gritty series of vignettes, with parts that made me hold my breath, and the author managed to craft a main character that was somehow relatable and charismatic when he should have been abhorrent for the deviant he clearly was. As the blurb so accurately states, this is a “disturbing yet eerily beautiful portrayal of American loneliness and hope”. Please read it.
- FayeReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 1, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Blown Away
Description:
A series of vignettes in the life of an unnamed narrator who's a total wreck - a petty criminal who cannot keep himself out of trouble.
Liked:
Loved, really; I was totally blown away. Wasn't expecting much of anything really, but this prose is incandescent - absolutely beautiful. Funny and profoundly bleak, simplistic but with strange, stark, piercing moments of clarity. It's been ages since I found writing this compelling. Why didn't anyone tell me about this guy!?
Disliked:
The protagonist is DEEPLY flawed, so expect gross behaviour and beliefs. It's not glorified or throwaway, though.
Cannot recommend highly enough. Seriously - you can read this in a couple of hours, this edition is beautiful and pocket-sized, and the writing is just incredible. Do yourself a favour.