Monday, February 17, 2020

Book Review


The Awful Truth about the Sushing Prize by Marco Ocram (a.k.a. Denis Shaughnessy) is a brilliantly-written crime thriller, “a light spoof,” parodizing not only literary works but also the writing process itself. Ocram writes the first thing that pops into his head and doesn't go back to revise anything he's written – “what was written was written.” This gets him stuck in strange situations, both in writing and in the story, and forces him to use “ludicrous plot twists whenever it suits him” to get himself out of a jam. In the words of Professor Sushing, “This so-called novel is the final gruesome development of Ocram's warped philosophy of literature. It is no less than a catalogue of bizarre and improbable twists from start to end.”

Marco Ocram isn't just the author of The Awful Truth about the Sushing Prize; he is also the narrator of the story as well as the fictional author of The Awful Truth about the Herbert Quarry Affair, “the world's fastest-selling book,” making him a “literary mega-star.” Ocram, who wears his “anorak” and his Rolex watch with his mom's face on the dial, is obsessed with his black Range Rover with tinted windows. He and his friend, Como Galahad, the Chief of Police of Clarkesville County, fight crime – and Marco writes about it. He is writing his book and sharing the process of writing with the reader: metacognitive story-telling. “I wondered if I was […] committing some enormous literary gaffe.” He does whatever he wants with his writing style, switching to movie-script mode to make writing a dialogue easier and changing to present tense to describe an action-packed scene, all the while alerting the reader of the changes. Ocram writes what he knows and lets the reader fill in the blanks when he doesn't. “[...] ignorance had never stopped me from writing about boring things, and I wasn't going to let it now.”

Those with a sense of humor will thoroughly enjoy the book. It's different, original, absurd, entertaining, ridiculous, and hilarious, all at the same time. I loved it. I found myself laughing out loud at various descriptions and situations throughout the book. I highly recommend it. I give it five stars because that's the maximum allowed. I finished this book and immediately bought the author's next book. I'm officially “Ocramized.”

No comments:

Post a Comment