Liver
A Fictional Organ with a Surface Anatomy of Four Lobes
By Will Self
November 2009
$26.00
288 pp
5.5 x 8.25 in
Hardcover
ISBN-10: 1596916648
Liver
A Fictional Organ with a Surface Anatomy of Four Lobes
By Will Self
November 2009
$26.00
288 pp
5.5 x 8.25 in
Hardcover
By Will Self
British satirist Will Self spins four interconnected stories into a brilliantly insightful commentary on human foibles and resilience.
Will Self's remarkable new stories center on the disease and decay that target the largest of human organs: the liver. Set in locales as toxic as a London drinking club and mundane as a clinic in an ultraorderly Swiss city, the stories distill the hard lives of their subjects whether alcoholic, drug addict, or cancer patient. I n "Fois Humane," set at the Plantation Club, it's always a Tuesday afternoon in midwinter, and the shivering denizens of this dusty realm spend their days observing its proprietor as he force-feeds the barman vodkaspiked beer. Joyce Beddoes, protagonist of "Leberknödel," has terminal liver cancer and is on her way to be euthanized in Zurich when, miraculously, her disease goes into remission. In "Prometheus" a young copywriter at London's most cutting edge ad agency has his liver nibbled by a griffon thrice daily, but he's always in the pink the following morning and ready to make that killer pitch. If blood and bile flow through liverish London, the two arteries meet in "Birdy Num Num," where "career junky" Billy Chobham performs little services for the customers who gather to wait for the Man, while in his blood a virus pullulates. A moving portrayal of egos, appetites and addictions, Liver is an extraordinary achievement.Reviews for Liver:
"There are real and original pleasures to be had from these stories, particularly from Self's extravagant and startling sense of language, as well as from the imaginative extremity of his vision. But they are not warm or merciful. These are for those who like their stories brainy, cunning, hard-edged and diabolical."—Richard McCann, The Washington Post
"Ecstatically evoking miasma, Self's prose is feral in pace, always zeroing in for the kill." —The New Yorker
"[A] smart, beguiling and occasionally stomach-turning book of four linked stories.. simultaneously Dickensian and Burroughsian; grotesque comedy narrated in ornate prose."—The New York Times Book Review. Read full review.
“Wit, furious energy, an idiosyncratic intellect and ornate, often strong language mark this British writer’s darkly offbeat fiction…. [LIVER is] brilliant and blistering.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Each story has a distinctive voice – Self employs lingusitic bravado in all.”—Library Journal