The Ginger Man

Paperback, 346 pages

English language

Published March 6, 1997 by Abacus.

ISBN:
978-0-349-10875-9
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4 stars (5 reviews)

12 editions

Review of 'The Ginger Man' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

There are a lot of quotes packed in this tome. And there are a lot of failures, but not in the writing.

During the first 20% of this book, I thought the rest of it would be pretty Hunter S. Thompson-straightforwardish, a bit of "oh, this must have influenced 'Withnail % I'", but no. I'm glad to have been wrong.

It's abuse. It's horror. The mundane existence of alcoholics (which is not mundane in the least to a non-alcoholic) embedded in thoughts spun as they're spoken, which is very comparable with an old comic-book without sound effects strewn throughout the pages. With all of the onomatopoetry lost, the reader gains much.

It all flows as stream-of-consciousness, even though it's evident and plain. An adulterer. A man of ill repute, yet of psychopathic tendencies. Some effective short sentences, e.g.

O'Keefe filling a bowl with bread crumbs. Night outside and the boom …

Review of 'The Ginger Man' on 'LibraryThing'

4 stars

There are a lot of quotes packed in this tome. And there are a lot of failures, but not in the writing.

During the first 20% of this book, I thought the rest of it would be pretty Hunter S. Thompson-straightforwardish, a bit of "oh, this must have influenced 'Withnail % I'", but no. I'm glad to have been wrong.

It's abuse. It's horror. The mundane existence of alcoholics (which is not mundane in the least to a non-alcoholic) embedded in thoughts spun as they're spoken, which is very comparable with an old comic-book without sound effects strewn throughout the pages. With all of the onomatopoetry lost, the reader gains much.

It all flows as stream-of-consciousness, even though it's evident and plain. An adulterer. A man of ill repute, yet of psychopathic tendencies. Some effective short sentences, e.g.

O'Keefe filling a bowl with bread crumbs. Night outside and the boom …

Review of 'The Ginger Man' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This was a weird book. I couldn't make my mind up whether I liked the protagonist or not. He was quite funny most of the time, and some of the things he did were comical. Then there's the side of him where he starts to smother his baby (who is hardly mentioned) with a pillow, the many times he hits the various women he sleeps with, and all the mindless acts of violence and criminality in his day-to-day life.

I think the writing style is about as close to that of Ulysses as I'd like in some parts. There's one fairly long section without punctuation, and infrequent use of quote marks throughout. There's also a lot of sentences like "Dangerfield to the cabinet."

Also, no fault of the book, but I thought I'd mention that I absolutely always read MacDoon's name as McDonalds. I must have been hungry for bad …

avatar for Ascapola

rated it

3 stars
avatar for TimMason

rated it

4 stars

Subjects

  • Modern fiction
  • Fiction

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