Armadillo

by William Boyd | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 014027944x Global Overview for this book
Registered by RDWirral of New Ferry, Merseyside United Kingdom on 7/22/2006
Buy from one of these Booksellers:
Amazon.com | Amazon UK | Amazon CA | Amazon DE | Amazon FR | Amazon IT | Bol.com
This book is in the wild! This Book is Currently in the Wild!
2 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by RDWirral from New Ferry, Merseyside United Kingdom on Saturday, July 22, 2006
My first releases are books i didn't finish and don't think i will miss. This book had a TV series made on the BBC about 5 years ago. It's a bit odd, but i think someone will appreciate it.

Amazon review:


Lorimer Black may suffer from a serious sleep disorder and an obsession with the labyrinths of the British class system, but Armadillo's peculiar protagonist is the star insurance adjuster of London's Fortress Sure PLC, unkindly known as the Fort. At the very start of William Boyd's noir-ish seventh novel, however, things take a decided swerve for the worse. On a bleak January morning one of his cases has apparently chosen to kill himself rather than talk: "Mr. Dupree was simultaneously the first dead person he had encountered in his life, his first suicide and his first hanged man and Lorimer found this congruence of firsts deceptively troubling."

Soon our hero, who himself has a lot to hide, finds himself threatened by a dodgy type whose loss he has adjusted way down and embroiled with the beautiful married actress Flavia Malinverno. "People who've lost something, they call on you to adjust it, make the loss less hard to bear? As if their lives are broken in some way and they call on you to fix it," Flavia dippily wonders. Lorimer also has his car torched and instantly goes from an object of affection to one of deep suspicion at the Fort. Then there is another case, the small matter of the rock star who may or may not be faking the Devil he claims is sitting on his left shoulder.

Needless to say, Lorimer is "becoming fed up with this role of fall guy for other people's woes." Boyd adds a deep layer of psychological heft and a lighter level of humour to this thinking-person's thriller by exploring Lorimer's manifold personal and social fears. This is a man who desperately collects ancient helmets even though he knows they offer only "the illusion of protection."

Another of Armadillo's many pleasures: its dose of delicious argot. Should Lorimer "oil" the apparent perpetrator of the Fedora Palace arson before he's oiled himself? Or perhaps he just needs to "put the frighteners" on him. Boyd definitely puts the frighteners on his readers more than once in this cinematically seedy and dazzling literary display.
RD xx

Released 17 yrs ago (8/23/2006 UTC) at Controlled Release in Controlled Release, A Bookcrossing member -- Controlled Releases

WILD RELEASE NOTES:

RELEASE NOTES:

Being sent to Swan Of Kennet in return for Oryx and Crake

Journal Entry 3 by SwanOfKennet from Edinburgh, Scotland United Kingdom on Wednesday, August 30, 2006
Safely received in this morning's post, along with something nice which I have already enjoyed. Thank you!

I'm a bit of a William Boyd fan, although it's been a few years since I read any of his, so I'm looking forward to this.


RELEASE NOTES:


Are you sure you want to delete this item? It cannot be undone.