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The Contortionist's Handbook by Craig…
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The Contortionist's Handbook (edition 2003)

by Craig Clevenger (Author)

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9541722,151 (3.92)15
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Clevenger has produced an utterly persuasive and compelling novel, combining the zest and enthusiasm of a new voice with the craft and the guile of a veteran. 

Following a near fatal overdose of painkillers, Daniel Fletcher is resuscitated in a Los Angeles emergency room and detained for psychiatric evaluation. Through a series of questions and tests, the psychiatrist must ascertain whether the patient intended to kill himself or whether he can walk free. What the psychiatrist doesn't know is that Daniel Fletcher is actually John "Johnny" Dolan Vincent, a brilliant young forger who continually changes his identity to save himself from a lifetime of incarceration. Johnny has done such assessments beforeā??many, many times. As he creates an elaborate bluff for the evaluator, Johnny reveals the true story of his traumatic past: a broken family, descent into the sinister world of forgers and criminals, and his one chance of salvation in the beautiful and elusive Molly. But time is running out; as his underworld clients lose patience and the psychiatrist's net closes around him, Johnny has to negotiate the escape act of his life.

Evoking the boulevards and strip bars of 1980s Los Angeles with cinematic intensity, The Contortionist's Handbook is a darkly hypnotic and stunningly original debut.… (more)

Member:davlap
Title:The Contortionist's Handbook
Authors:Craig Clevenger (Author)
Info:MacAdam/Cage Publishing (2003), Edition: First Edition, 199 pages
Collections:read, nothanks, to-find, Your library, Currently reading, To read, Read but unowned, Favorites
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The Contortionist's Handbook by Craig Clevenger

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» See also 15 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 17 (next | show all)
The Contortionist's Handbook is a novel that is stylishly written in a minimalist style that evokes Chuck Palahniuk. I've given the novel 4 stars primarily because of Clevenger's sense of style, mood, and dialogue, but unfortunately the tale never pays off with an emotionally satisfying or enlightening ending. ( )
  waconner | Jun 29, 2023 |
The Contortionist's Handbook is an engrossing adventure story. The drugs, the sex, the criminal underworld portions could have been cut out and it still would be great. The conflict is between the individual and the system. Where the novel shines is in the first-person narration and the description made by that individual of what the State has been to him.

Bureaucrats, psychiatrists in white robes, the police, judges are the individuals on the other side of the line. In his side of the line, he mostly stands alone. The narrator has a very unique voice and the author writes so well that we get into the narrator's head very easily. The use of flashbacks is also great.

The prose has been described as reminiscent of Palahniuk's. There is truth to this, but then again Palahniuk's prose isn't really that unique if you think about it. Palahniuk's style is noir-ish, and reading the CH, I am reminded of the stylish visuals of the neo-noir film 'The Salton Sea' starring Val Kilmer. ( )
  rufus666 | Aug 14, 2022 |
I really liked the complexity of the book but the story did not seem to have enough conflict for my tastes. He is an excellent author and I would recommend this book to anyone that likes the transgressive genre. ( )
  Drunken-Otter | Aug 20, 2021 |
So far, almost overly Palahniuk-esque. Paranoid, cynical, misanthropic, arrogant. I'm glad he's given some character background, though, because it makes the protagonist somewhat sympathetic. Otherwise I think he'd be intolerable.

........

It had a really good ending. Still very, very Palahniuk-esque, minus any fantastic/supernatural elements. ( )
  xiaomarlo | Apr 17, 2019 |
This reminds me in a general way of Stone Junction and Chuck Palahniuk's themes. Druggy beta male audacity.
  sonyagreen | Jun 24, 2015 |
Showing 1-5 of 17 (next | show all)
Clevenger has produced an utterly persuasive and compelling novel, combining the zest and enthusiasm of a new voice with the craft and the guile of a veteran...The Contortionist's Handbook is so accomplished, and in so many different ways, that it instantly elevates Craig Clevenger into the top echelon of writers.
added by jam13 | editThe Guardian, Irvine Welsh (Apr 15, 2005)
 
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I count my overdoses on one hand:
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Fiction. Literature. HTML:

Clevenger has produced an utterly persuasive and compelling novel, combining the zest and enthusiasm of a new voice with the craft and the guile of a veteran. 

Following a near fatal overdose of painkillers, Daniel Fletcher is resuscitated in a Los Angeles emergency room and detained for psychiatric evaluation. Through a series of questions and tests, the psychiatrist must ascertain whether the patient intended to kill himself or whether he can walk free. What the psychiatrist doesn't know is that Daniel Fletcher is actually John "Johnny" Dolan Vincent, a brilliant young forger who continually changes his identity to save himself from a lifetime of incarceration. Johnny has done such assessments beforeā??many, many times. As he creates an elaborate bluff for the evaluator, Johnny reveals the true story of his traumatic past: a broken family, descent into the sinister world of forgers and criminals, and his one chance of salvation in the beautiful and elusive Molly. But time is running out; as his underworld clients lose patience and the psychiatrist's net closes around him, Johnny has to negotiate the escape act of his life.

Evoking the boulevards and strip bars of 1980s Los Angeles with cinematic intensity, The Contortionist's Handbook is a darkly hypnotic and stunningly original debut.

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