I’ll start, so as a teen I stumbled across a book called," Someone comes to town, someone leaves town." The synopsis caught me as it’s about a man with a mountain as a fathera washing machine as a mother and one brother that is dead and trying to harm him. I’ll admit some of the technical terms were too much for my developing mind but it has stuck with me all these years.
What is the wackiest / craziest book you’ve read and did you enjoy the ride?
Probably The Third Policeman. I had totally forgotten why it was on my to-read list, so I thought it was just a generic mystery novel coming in… it wasn’t that. It actually did start out like a crime novel with some slightly weird undertones, but then it just took a sharp left turn and went totally off the rails. Completely wild book—it’s complete nonsense that makes sense in a dream-logic sort of way. I’ve read a lot of books that try to read like dreams, but they’re always either too internally consistent or fall apart completely; The Third Policeman is a rare book that actually pulls it off.
What really pulls it together is the language. The language is the internal logic that keeps the book flowing: nothing in the book makes sense if you think about it conceptually, but it’s kept together through what I can best describe as a sort of language association game. At one, point, for example, the main character has forgotten his name, so he makes up with a list of names he might have had:
Then his conscience—named Joe—goes off on a tangent about the just-made-up Signor Beniamino Bari:
This random story about a totally made-up name goes on for a couple more paragraphs. Then there’s another one about Dr Solway Garr, until the main character—still nameless—has had enough:
…and then none of the names or stories ever come up again. Almost everything in the book is like that: here for a moment, gradually transforms into something totally different and then never comes back. It’s something between watching improv and dreaming.
And sometimes the language is just hilarious on its own. Random phrases just totally got me on occasion:
Not a bad descrption for the whole book, really!
Probably the right answer. A unique description of a frightening place that has existed throughout human literature.
Ever read At Swim Two Birds?