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Review: Lurid & Cute

Energy sapping prose

April 8, 2015 15:39
Adam Thirlwell: brilliant critic but too flat and hyper-modern a writer

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

By Adam Thirlwell
Jonathan Cape, £16.99

Adam Thirlwell has had a charmed life as a writer. He has written novels (Politics, The Escape and the "new kind of story" Kapow!). His Miss Herbert (2007) is one of the best books of literary criticism written in the past 30 years. He was chosen as one of Granta's "Best of Young British Novelists" both in 2003 and in 2013. He has now brought out a new novel, Lurid & Cute, which, even were he eligible, would surely not place him among Granta's "Best of Young British Novelists" for 2023.

Lurid & Cute is the story of a young man ("kind of thirty") who lives with his wife, Candy, his best friend, Hiro, and his anxious parents in the LA suburbs. The narrator doesn't work, takes lots of drugs, some recreational, some medical, has lots of sex (including with a prostitute and some s&m), none of which seems to cheer him up; he is deeply melancholy - a word he prefers to "depressed".

We first meet him in a hotel room where he is sleeping with his friend, Romy. While he is wondering how he can explain this away to his wife, he discovers that Romy is lying in a pool of blood. This could be the beginning of a thriller but isn't. After a while, she disappears, only to turn up again later almost as if nothing had happened.