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Vivid, violent comedy of terrors

Distinctive comedy writer is on dark, top form

December 14, 2012 13:31
Homes: 'Something slightly broken'

ByMadeleine Kingsley, Madeleine Kingsley

1 min read

The start of A M Homes’s new novel, is truly to die for: the action is murderous, and the shattering of successful lives delivered with g-force intensity. Homes sets brothers Harry and George Silver (an Esau and Jacob of the heavily health-insured, SUV generation) against each other.

Narrator Harry, the older and less gifted of the two, is a childless historian struggling to finish a book about Nixon. TV executive George is highly volatile, but his covetable wife and Westchester lifestyle keep his temper more or less buttoned until, one day, driving home, he boils over. A double disaster of sex, violence and derangement ensues. By page 20, two families are destroyed.

The novel then moves into the dark, satirical territory where Homes excels. The medics and lawyers charged with George’s care and detention would probably score higher on the psychotic scale than his briefly strait-jacketed self. And the discovery of some reflective short stories by the disgraced Richard Nixon suggests that even he, after all, had some good — and intellect.

Repair and redemption preoccupy Harry’s mind as he takes over George’s household complete with pets and his now essentially parentless, disturbed and painfully pubescent nephew Nate and niece Ashley.