Hide this

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Demonology: Stories by Rick Moody
Loading...

Demonology (edition 2002)

by Rick Moody

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
506618,404 (3.47)12
Member:gaskella
Title:Demonology
Authors:Rick Moody
Info:Faber and Faber (2002), Paperback
Collections:Your library, To read
Rating:
Tags:Fiction, TBR

Work details

Demonology: Stories by Rick Moody

None.

Loading...

Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book.

Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
after having read The Ice Storm and Garden State many moons ago (the late 90s), I had lost track of Rick Moody. Not that he went anywhere. I even have a copy of Purple America that I have never read. But I just never found myself drawn back to him. Recently I had to read Demonology for a class and also had the chance to meet Moody at a reading. I have fallen into his post-Ice Storm work with much enthusiasm. It doesn't always work ("Hawaiian Night" is conceptually interesting but almost too dense to figure out; "Wilkie Fahnstock" seems like one of those ideas that probably shouldn't have made it to the page), but when it does, I am enthralled ("Mansion on the Hill," "Forecast from the Retail Desk," "The Carnival Tradition," "Boys," and of course "Demonology."

He's definitely not for everyone -- and I don't mean that in a "I'm smart enough to get it" way. If you can get through the misfires, the ones that hit, hit hard. ( )
  evanroskos | Mar 30, 2013 |
Finished the book on my way home from the UK. I found most of the stories intriguing. I need to find out more about the author, I'd like to read a novel (if he published one). I noticed that there were a couple of recurring topics in the stories (car accidents while driving under the influence, alienation of family members) and I would be interested to find out what he'd do with that in a novel.
  verenka | Jun 25, 2010 |
Moody and his postmodern cohorts have more in common with Charles Dickens then any 20th century writer I could name. Sure, there's Pynchon, Gaddis, Barthelme, but those writer lack the sheer love of humanity that shines out this book by Moody. ( )
  EdwardC | Apr 2, 2008 |
The stories in this collection carry a sense of loss and non-sappy nostalgia wrapped in a wicked sense of humor. "The Mansion on the Hill", "Double Zero", "The Carnival Tradition" and "Demonology" are strikingly good. Some of the more experimental ones are difficult to penetrate. ( )
  Hagelstein | Mar 1, 2008 |
A frustratingly uneven collection, containing one story which I'd consider to be a modern classic ('Demonology') and one story so torturously overwritten as to be unreadable ('Pan's Fair Throng'). Sometimes I found myself suppressing the feeling that these stories exist primarily as an excuse to showboat, that they're really more about Moody as a stylist than they are about the people they are ostensibly about. In this way the book ends up reminding me of the Coen Brothers movies: inventive, flashy, often entertaining, but with little sense of human urgency. ( )
  jbushnell | Nov 13, 2006 |
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
no reviews | add a review
You must log in to edit Common Knowledge data.
For more help see the Common Knowledge help page.
Series (with order)
Canonical title
Original title
Alternative titles
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Related movies
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Dedication
First words
Quotations
Last words
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Publisher series

References to this work on external resources.

Wikipedia in English

None

Book description
Haiku summary

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0316592102, Paperback)

Rick Moody is a traditionalist. Despite his page-long paragraphs, brand-name dropping, obsessive cataloguing of workplace ritual, seemingly random italicizing, and inevitable digs at "multinational entertainment providers," Moody makes classically beautiful short stories. His tools are those of any master storyteller: detail, catharsis, the right word at the right moment. Granted, the details can be unexpected: e.g., comparative values of different Pez dispensers. And his brand of catharsis can be mighty abrupt. "Now the intolerable part of this story begins," he warns us in the title story of Demonology, while "Hawaiian Night" includes the ominous spoiler, "Here comes tragedy." Yet his word choice is always immaculate.

Moody's collection is framed by two stories in which the narrator ruminates over his dead sister. In the first, "The Mansion on the Hill," he speaks directly to the departed:

You were a fine sister, but you changed your mind all the time, and I had no idea if these things I'd attributed to you in the last year were features of the you I once knew, or whether, in death, you had become the property of your mourners, so that we made of you a puppet.
The story promptly turns into a revenge fantasy, with an absurd climax wherein the narrator attacks his sister's former fiancé. "Demonology" deals with the actual circumstances of her death. First we see her tucking the kids into bed prior to her fatal seizure: "And my sister kissed her daughter multiply, because my niece is a little impish redhead, and it's hard not to kiss her." Moody then switches tone smoothly and beautifully as the medics work on the dead woman: "Her body jumped while they shocked her--she was a revenant in some corridor of simultaneities--but her heart wouldn't start." A writer who pins down such fluidities can get up to all the experimentation he likes. We'll go along willingly. --Claire Dederer

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:30:17 -0500)

(see all 2 descriptions)

No library descriptions found.

Quick Links

Swap Ebooks Audio
21 avail.
21 wanted
2 pay

Popular covers

Rating

Average: (3.47)
0.5
1 1
1.5
2 5
2.5
3 25
3.5 3
4 26
4.5
5 5

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

Help/FAQs | About | Privacy/Terms | Blog | Contact | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | Legacy Libraries | 81,950,389 books!