On my summer holiday staying at an old house in the remote countryside I'm perusing the bookshelves when my eyes fall upon A Season In Purgatory by an American writer called Dominick Dunne. On the cover a quote by Nicholas Coleridge writing for the Daily Mail offers a bold endorsement: "I doubt anyone this year will write a more satisfying or beautifully observed novel". I check inside and note the book was published in 1993. This book, according to Coleridge, is more beautifully observed than Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks. It shits all over Sebastian Faulks. According to Coleridge.
Does the cover illustration perhaps contradict his claim, I wonder? A
broken baseball bat, smeared in blood, propped up on the stairs of a porch.
"Satisfying."? Surely some mistake here? But no. On the inside cover
are more unbelievable quotes. "There isn't a single tranche of dialogue in
this book that doesn't sound authentic." Not a single tranche, you say?
Fucking hell. Tatler magazine reckons "people in the know will be reading
A Season In Purgatory this summer." The Daily Express simply states
"a compelling read". Fair play, Daily Express. I believe you. Really
I do.
This is going to be quite a holiday read, I think excitedly. Quickly
leafing through to get an idea of whether the prose is my cup of tea the first
passage I turn to is this: "he dropped to his knees. There in front of him
on the ground was Winifred Utley. She was wearing the same pink dress she had
on at the dance at the club, but it was pushed up on her so part of the skirt
covered her face. Her panties were pulled down to her knees. I reached
out to touch her but her face and head were covered in blood."
Beautifully observed. Really fucking beautiful. Touching.
I turn back to page one. A quote read aloud in a courtroom has the
defendant allegedly asking the victim on the night of her murder, "do you
mind dancing with a man with an erection?"
What a totally fucking authentic tranche of dialogue. I challenge
anybody, ANYBODY, to suggest that tranche of dialogue isn't authentic.
The golden nuggets of written English just keep on coming. On page two,
PAGE FUCKING TWO, we are told that the narrator is at the urinal when Constant
(that's the main deviant's name...I'll come back to this later) was
"standing there next to me when, suddenly, without speaking a word, he
turned and aimed the strong steady stream of his urine in my direction, soaking
my blazer and trousers."
A piss attack. On the second fucking page of this masterpiece. You might
be thinking page two is too early for a man to be pissing on another man's
suit. Well, fuck you. It's not too early. It's the perfect point in the
novel for that to happen.
Let me fill you in on the main plot so you don't think this book is just
a urine soaked rape fest (it is that, but it's also so much more than that...)
The narrator, Harrison Burns, begins the tale in 1972. Aged 17, he is best
friends with a rich spoilt brat, Constant. This rich brat waits in the woods
after a dance and batters a 15 year old girl to death with a baseball bat after
attempting to rape her but failing to establish or maintain an erection. We
later find out that both he and his father have dick problems which fuels their
loathing of women and causes them to repeatedly make attempts at rape. Burns is
bribed by the rich kid's father to help cover up the murder which he does for
years before finally buckling to guilt and testifying against his former friend
at a huge high profile court case. At which Constant is acquitted.
Whoops I just ruined the whole book. But it really doesn't matter.
You're never going to read it.
Woah , woah, woah I hear you say. That's all a bit nonchalantly reeled
off... There's some heavy shit in their, man. Well, yeah. The author is a
master of nonchalance. Take the scene where the rich kid's dad is empathising
with his son's dick problems…
"'well, as we know, there's
no anger like the anger of a soft dick', said Gerald. Gerald's enthusiasm for
his favorite son never wavered". Soft dick? Anger? Just a second…. being
abused as a child. Having a loved one killed in a war. Being born deaf and
blind. Being autistic. Being born in the poverty of a Mumbai slum. Being black
in the Deep South in the 1930s. THESE things are probably worthy of anger. A
soft dick? Take some fucking Viagra. Surely?
"Pa, you're not taking this seriously enough"' the tranche of
dialogue continues... "'I admire a man with a healthy appetite for pussy',
Gerald said. 'I'm not sure how healthy his appetite is Pa, we might just have a
sicko on our hands here.' Well, duh. The cunt's bludgeoned to death a 15year
old girl with a fucking rounders bat. "'Constant's no sicko', said Gerald
firmly, " let me talk to him."
And, I don't know about you, but I find that passage both authentic AND beautifully observed. Just like Nicholas Coleridge of the Daily Mail.
And, I don't know about you, but I find that passage both authentic AND beautifully observed. Just like Nicholas Coleridge of the Daily Mail.
Did I mention that the villain's name is Constant? Bit of a weird name
right? A word usually used as an adverb or an adjective. Not a name. But
it's just one of many, many stupid fucking names in this beautifully observed
book. Here's a shortlist of the best ones...
Captain Quish ('chief Quish' for short)
Piggy French (the clue's in the name)
Bridey Nora (the clue's in the name)
Esme Bland (the clue's in the name)
Eloise Brazen (the clue's in the name)
Fruity Suarez (racist?)
Puff Rooney (I shit you not)
Rupert Du Pithon (get the fuck outta here! No, honestly...)
Cleanie Cleanie (a household cleaning maid, go figure)
Fatty Malloy (is he fat? Yep, he's fucking fat alright)
Weegie Somerset (sounds like a ghost story set at a traffic lights in
Yeovil)
Johnny Fuselli (a bit like the pasta)
I am not making these names up. The author made these names up. To be
fair to him, there is currently a member of the Great Britain equestrian team
called Piggy French. Coincidence or unbelievable artistic foresight? I think
you'll find it's the latter. The man's a fucking visionary.
The book unfolds dramatically into a hornet's nest of debauchery and,
basically, evil. But there's still time for a legitimate sex scene along the
way. At one point a woman named Kitt drops to her knees in the living room of
her elderly mother's house and takes Harrison's penis in her mouth. (Not
my words). Her sister walks in and sees them. Disgusted she says "cover
your breasts Kitt, how could you stoop so low?"
Er...how else is she gonna suck his dick? Right?
But now is not the time or place for semantics. It's an incredibly authentic tranche of dialogue. All the tranches of dialogue in this book are really fucking authentic.
Er...how else is she gonna suck his dick? Right?
But now is not the time or place for semantics. It's an incredibly authentic tranche of dialogue. All the tranches of dialogue in this book are really fucking authentic.
A beautifully observed scene in which Harrison, the hero, is pulled
underwater by a man in a wetsuit is rounded off with our hero smashing his heel
into the assailant's nose, breaking it and "clouding the water with
blood". The action takes place at a location called Shinnecock
Bay. Lovely stuff.
As well as making light of disabilities ("if you weren’t a cripple
I'd kick the shit out of you Jerry") not to mention HIV and AIDS in a
couple of beautifully observed bits of dialogue, the book also deals with other
heavyweight issues: Rape, murder, high school expulsion, theft, lies, adultery,
bribery, more rape, sexual assaults on minors, more rape. Lots and lots of
rape. This book is like Jilly Cooper's 'Riders' but without the riding and with
lots of raping. He should have called it 'Rapers'. The publishing house might
have objected to that I suppose.
If this novel were satirising traditionally hostile literary depictions
of the vulgar, amoral American super-rich it might have worked, if only as a
mildly amusing trite comic novella. But it isn't. It's serious and allegedly
based on a true life case involving one of the younger members of the Kennedy
family. The problem is it's written by a man who just might have got an
erection while writing it, for an audience of readers who just might get an
erection while reading it.
The final line is beautifully observed. The police finally discover the
baseball bat murder weapon hidden in a plastic bag in a lake in Conneticut
where Johnny Fuselli assured Burns it would be. Fuselli, now dead, is
emotionally eulogised by the narrator. "Salvation at last. Purgatory
behind him, I know now that Johnny Fuselli has ascended into the Kingdom of
Heaven."
And if that's not beautifully observed then, Jesus Christ, I don't know
what is.