Goya's Dog
by Damian Tarnopolsky
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A stunning, darkly comic consideration of love, grief, the appeal of gin, and the artist's role in times of war. Edward Dacres is an unforgettable anti-hero, a dissolute painter whose fortunes in London have dwindled to nothing by the autumn of 1939. When a misdirected letter invites him to take part in a delegation to bring art to the Colonies, as it were, he seizes the opportunity to leave England. Once in North America, Dacres is forced by a series of mishaps to abandon the show more delegation and seek survival by any means. In the puritan climate of 1939 Toronto, however, most citizens have their thoughts on the war and don't care a whit for his painted triangles. Most, that is, with the notable exception of a beautiful heiress with an eye for art and a wilful determination to save Dacres from himself. A love story laced with satire, a historical novel bearing on contemporary truths, a picaresque tale of cowardice, drinking and artistic paralysis, Goya's Dog is above all else an original and mesmerizing debut novel from a writer The Globe and Mail has called "a truly new voice, delivered with rare panache." show lessTags
Member Reviews
Terrific novel in the tradition of British satirists like Waugh or Maugham. I would have given it five stars except for the character of the wife, which added an unnecessary sentimental note. Still, highly recommended. The writing is sophisticated and the humor dark as hell.
Goya's Dog is about an English artist Edward Dacres who, through a case of mistaken identity, ends up in Toronto at the start of the Second World War. Penniless, contemptuous of his surroundings, unmotivated to paint and unwilling to work, he goes into a downward spiral until he is saved by beautiful heiress Darly Burner.
Dacres is not an easy character to like. Indeed, I found the first half of the book describing his self-inflicted descent to be tiresome after a while and wished that Tarnopolsky would just get on with it. That he does eventually, and in the end, I was impressed by how skillfully he manipulates the reader. By giving brief and sometimes unexpected glimpses into Dacres's past, he slowly leads the reader to an show more understanding of Dacres's circumstances and mindset, and he succeeds in turning one's initial contempt into compassion.
I hesitate to say that I enjoyed reading this book. However, Tarnopolsky writes with much humour and does an excellent job of evoking the feel of Toronto at the start of the war. This first novel from Tarnopolsky is intriguing enough that I would be interested in reading more from this author. show less
Dacres is not an easy character to like. Indeed, I found the first half of the book describing his self-inflicted descent to be tiresome after a while and wished that Tarnopolsky would just get on with it. That he does eventually, and in the end, I was impressed by how skillfully he manipulates the reader. By giving brief and sometimes unexpected glimpses into Dacres's past, he slowly leads the reader to an show more understanding of Dacres's circumstances and mindset, and he succeeds in turning one's initial contempt into compassion.
I hesitate to say that I enjoyed reading this book. However, Tarnopolsky writes with much humour and does an excellent job of evoking the feel of Toronto at the start of the war. This first novel from Tarnopolsky is intriguing enough that I would be interested in reading more from this author. show less
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- Toronto, Ontario, Canada
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- (3.75)
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