The Good and the Ghastly
A Novel
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
It’s the thirty-fourth century and the nuclear apocalypse has come and gone. Civilization has rebuilt itself, and the results are eerily similar to the early part of the twenty-first century. But there are a few notable differences. Visa owns everything. Deer are the most common domesticated animal. And misinterpretations of preapocalyptic history run amuck (e.g., Sarah Palin established the theory of natural selection). But what hasn’t changed is the nature of good and evil.
The Good and the Ghastly centers on two people linked through violence. Mobster Junior Alvarez has risen from street thug to criminal overlord. He will go to incredible lengths to get what he wants—and he desires to live however he pleases, without compromise. The intensity of his quest is matched only by that of the mother of one of Alvarez’s first victims. She has gone vigilante and is hunting down mobsters. The two are prepared to go to the ends of the earth to manifest their wills—one good, one ghastly, both ruthless.
A wild satire of our own society, The Good and the Ghastly is a visceral novel informed by Boice’s unnerving sense of reality and pathology. It is also an honest, old-fashioned good-versus-evil story—with a twist of modern-day madness.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Set in the 3340s, this broadly satirical thriller imagines that, in the aftermath of a devastating global nuclear war, humanity has managed to rebuild a world that closely resembles our own early 21st century. Boice (MVP) plays with the aphorism that those who fail to remember the past are doomed to repeat it (the 34th century has its own Hitler, Adoranso Horater, who's committed to exterminating the Jews), but otherwise offers stock characters and situations indistinguishable from those in a contemporary crime novel. The more significant changes, such as a different approach to obesity (all newborns get gastric bypasses) or an evolutionary scheme that produced a squirrel with a scaled tale and vestigial wings, are mere throwaways that define the setting as "other." Those whose idea of biting social commentary is a future in which people celebrate Christmas by human sacrifices to a huge stone statue of Garfield, the cartoon cat, will feel right at home.
Customer Reviews
100 Words or Less
I could barely get through the first 60 pages of this nonsense. It was simply one of those books whose main character irritated me to no end: his annoying, cocky, juvenile, and tone-deaf narrative was impossible to endure. Add to that, the plot was flat no matter how much nonsense the writer tried to shoehorn in.
Oh, I understand how some might enjoy the hectic pace and style. Just not me. I found it simply unreadable.