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Even the Dogs (2010)

af Jon McGregor

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingOmtaler
4215060,194 (3.25)51
Roman om de liv der leves i samfundets udkanter. Liget af en mand bliver fundet i hans forfaldne lejlighed, og mens samfundets går i gang med sit bureaukrati, fortælles hans triste historie af dem, som kendte ham - de andre hjemløse, alkoholikere og narkomaner.
  1. 10
    Requiem for a Dream af Hubert Selby Jr. (sanddancer)
    sanddancer: Both bleak but well-written stories of addiction.
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» Se også 51 omtaler

Engelsk (49)  Fransk (1)  Alle sprog (50)
Viser 1-5 af 50 (næste | vis alle)
I normally love experimental literature, but the extreme form of the narrative make Even the Dogs too hard for me to follow. I may try again later.
  settingshadow | Aug 19, 2023 |
Even the Dogs takes us into the grimy subculture of heroin addiction in a British urban centre. The story is rudimentary. The body of Robert Radcliffe is discovered in a squalid, chaotic apartment about a week after his death from the accumulated effects of long-term alcohol abuse and general physical neglect. Prior to this event Robert’s apartment was the nexus for a group of addicts to whom he permitted use the place to get high so long as they contributed to the supply of food and drink. But Robert’s death, which happens between Christmas and New Year’s, sends the group scattering into the streets, and once police and a forensics team move in the apartment is off limits. The remainder of the novel chronicles, often in grisly detail, the fates of the addicts as well as the agonizing journey of Robert’s body from point of discovery through to autopsy and, finally, disposal. Jon McGregor’s fiction is routinely cited for bold departures from conventional storytelling strategies and techniques. In Even the Dogs he utilizes a collective narrative voice to depict events as they happen, writing from the perspective of the group of addicts, who serve as a kind of Greek chorus, observing the proceedings from the shadows as police, medical examiners and others go about their business. The novel is at its best when the narrative zeroes in on the individual addicts—Danny, Mike, Ben, Laura, Ant—and we learn how circumstances conspired to lead them down a tragic and desperate path. The novel is densely written in prose that echoes an urban streetwise vernacular, and McGregor conveys, vividly and dispassionately, the painful craving of drug addiction and the catastrophic decisions it forces on its sufferers. But it’s impossible to ignore the fact that the book also presents a case of technique overwhelming story. After a while the reader longs for a simple, straightforward description or scrap of dialogue that would enable us to connect with a character. The book’s brilliance is that it shows us everything and turns away from nothing. But the tone throughout is clinical, and in the final analysis our response to this novel is blunted by its lack of emotional depth. ( )
  icolford | Apr 27, 2019 |
Dismal, bleak and mercifully short. This was like Melvin Burgess's [b:Junk|98973|Junk|Melvin Burgess|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1171430616s/98973.jpg|2756729] crossed with Jim Crace's [b:Being Dead|92559|Being Dead|Jim Crace|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1362225657s/92559.jpg|1239782]. Cut off sentences add urgency but also stand for muddled minds unable to focus. I thought this was a powerful work about loneliness, addiction and people living beyond the borders of society. Impressive. ( )
  asxz | Mar 13, 2019 |
Some of the descriptions are stomach-churning. ( )
  Faradaydon | Feb 24, 2019 |
Well, this made for somewhat odd Yom Kippur reading. Strong start, strong finish, indifferent middle. Hated, hated, hated the way it was written. I'm all for taking chances with style, but the random sentence fragments were driving me nuts. ( )
  GaylaBassham | May 27, 2018 |
Viser 1-5 af 50 (næste | vis alle)
“Even the Dogs,” McGregor’s third novel, continues his experiments with the devices of fiction. The book is narrated by a group of urban ghosts, victims of drug overdoses who look on as someone they know, Robert Radcliffe, is found dead in his shabby apartment. Other friends, family members and acquaintances, most of whom were part of Robert’s life, come in and out of focus as they move around the city looking for their next fixes and, along with the police and investigators, ­respond to Robert’s death.

As a novel about the consequences of addiction — particularly heroin addiction — “Even the Dogs” is harrowing. It details the physical, psychological, social and environmental damage, and portrays the all-consuming nature of the life: “Always working and watching and chasing around for a bag of that. Jesus but. The man-hours that go into living like this. Takes some dedication.”
 
Even the Dogs is set among the underclass of an anonymous English city. The narrative is structured around the sudden death of Robert, a chronic alcoholic, and follows the state's processing of his corpse and the impact of its discovery on the ragged group of addicts and down-and-outs who surround him in his final years.

Their story is narrated in a voice that, like them, is both striking and elusive. It inhabits the first person plural, often functioning like the directions in a film script ("We see someone getting out of a taxi") but also showing signs of having its own history ("We never met Yvonne but we see her now") and attitudes ("We're not sure what else we can do").

Even the Dogs is a courageous and passionate novel and shows McGregor to be one of the few young English writers taking genuine risks with language and form. If some of them fail to pay off, there is no less to admire, no less nerve and ingenuity, in the attempt.
 
On his website, McGregor – who's best known for his Booker-longlisted first novel, If Nobody Speaks of Remarkable Things (2002) – names James Kelman and William Faulkner as the new book's literary models. With their help, he strikes a neat balance between depicting a semi-abstract landscape of suffering and grounding the characters' experiences firmly in history. His occasional use of the language of damnation and salvation doesn't tip over into would-be Beckett-like posturing, while the deep backgrounds to some of his character's problems – the Falklands war, Thatcher-era unemployment and, in one memorable passage, Afghanistan – are neither deployed as clinching revelations nor put on show as grand themes. McGregor also shows a fine ear for several varieties of regional speech, and exerts strict but not obsessive control over his initially formless-looking story. His reportorial absorption in the characters' world, with its restricted range of tone and incident, makes this powerful novel seem all the more resourcefully put together.
 
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Roman om de liv der leves i samfundets udkanter. Liget af en mand bliver fundet i hans forfaldne lejlighed, og mens samfundets går i gang med sit bureaukrati, fortælles hans triste historie af dem, som kendte ham - de andre hjemløse, alkoholikere og narkomaner.

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