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The Lazy Boys

A Novel

Carl Shuker

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Paperback

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English
Counterpoint
23 August 2006
Carl Shuker's protagonist, Richard Sauer, heads off to college for no reason other than to escape the stultifying normalcy of his middle-class family in Timaru, New Zealand. He may appear ordinary in his aimlessness, mangling his way through his first year in college, but his bonging and banging, his anger and rage, take a brutal turn at an out-of-control dorm party which lands Richey in front of the disciplinary committee with a sexual harassment charge. Dropping out of school before he's thrown out, Richey and his housemates Matt, Nick, and Ursula begin a freefall that forces Richey to face his most destructive desires.

Sex, violence, mutilation, and drugs fuel the despair and alienation of these disaffected youth - those once innocent but now struggle to find the right combination of alcohol and drugs to keep an all-night buzz. Like a punch in the stomach or a sustained cry, Carl Shuker's risky and harrowing first person narrative is as visceral as Fight Club and as brutal as A Clockwork Orange. On the surface Richey's actions are unforgivable, but his unformed and distorted world is immediate and recognizable to a generation brought up in a society indifferent to its own nihilism.
By:  
Imprint:   Counterpoint
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 209mm,  Width: 139mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   383g
ISBN:   9781593761233
ISBN 10:   1593761236
Pages:   304
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Carl Shuker is the author of four novels, including The Method Actors, The Lazy Boys, and Anti Lebanon. The Method Actors won the 2006 Prize in Modern Letters. He works for the British Medical Journal, one of the oldest medical journals in the world. He lived in Tokyo and London for many years and now lives in his home country New Zealand with his wife, the novelist Anna Smaill, and their two children.

Reviews for The Lazy Boys: A Novel

A novel that begins with epigrams from the Pixies, the Clash and Milton has good potential. Don't let it fool you.After a promising debut with The Method Actors (2005), a layered portrait of expats in Japan, Shuker takes an odd step backward, time-wise and otherwise, into the demimonde of collegiate underachievers on New Zealand's South Island. It's the aoristic modern age, and 18-year-old Richard Sauer, aka Souse, is a mess who thrives on video nasties, ganja, piss (that is, beer) and piss bongs. Students are allowed, expected, even obliged to keep up the image-carry out new feats of bonging, drink the most, the quickest, for the longest duration. He has spent most of his grants and student allowances but has yet to attend a class, and, as the cancer-stricken angel who, one supposes, stands for all that is good-his opposite, that is-reminds him, it's April. Oh, yes, young master Sauer is possibly suicidal and certainly violent: Early on, he beats his parents' little dog, while even earlier on, he rapes a young woman. Given this resume, it seems that his options are limited: He can join the army or the police, become a mechanic, go to tech school or stay at home going insane on the dole. He does quite worse than all that. His parents aren't much help in Souse's decline and fall, though they try to be; think of Alex's mum and pop in A Clockwork Orange, and you're most of the way there. Souse is just as bad a piece of work. Shuker writes well, and the stream-of-consciousness weirdness coming out of Souse has moments. But the point of the exercise seems to be unclear, unless it's to report the dreariness of life in the postindustrial Antipodes or warn of what listening to one too many Cure songs can lead to.Absent clear guidance, take these lessons: Stay clear of beer bongs. And of this book, too. (Kirkus Reviews)


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