free hit
counters

Occasional literary links, amusements, culture, politics, and rants

On Will Elliott’s The Pilo Family Circus

April 19, 2009 | Comments Off

My latest contribution to NPR’s Books We Like is an appreciation of Will Elliott’s The Pilo Family Circus:

Fans have waited more than 20 years for another book from the great Katherine Dunn, whose amazing Geek Love centers on a family of circus freaks and sets the standard for the literary Big Top novel. She’s still working and won’t be rushed, but she does have a recommendation. In her glowing introduction to Australian writer Will Elliott’s gripping debut, The Pilo Family Circus, Dunn offers comparisons to Kafka, Chandler, Swift, Orwell, King and The Three Stooges. The blend may be hard to conceptualize, but Elliott’s story of a young man unwillingly inducted into a lethal clown act mixes horror, satire and slapstick into a brutal but timeless parable.

Jamie, a timid everyman with an arts degree who works as a concierge at a Brisbane gentleman’s club and has arranged his bedroom with an eye toward impressing a cocktail waitress he’s never had the nerve to ask out, nearly runs into a psychotic clown with his car after getting off a shift one night. Soon his apartment is trashed, his roommate Steve is vomiting blood, the clown and his buddies are constantly dropping in to make threats, and both Jamie and Steve are told they must pass an audition — by making the clowns laugh — within 48 hours, or die.

See also Brian Evenson’s interview with Elliott, and the author’s book notes installment.

Comments

Comments are closed.

On Twitter

  • 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' reissue includes missing chapter. http://bit.ly/9EPd8H http://bit.ly/a5jxHZ (via @galleycat) 18 mins ago
  • .@GrantaMag's sex issue is available in the iPhone store, for £1.19: http://bit.ly/aLJXHr 1 hr ago
  • McSweeney's seeks to award $2,500 to a female writer, age 32 or younger, of 'outrageous lyricism and heart': http://bit.ly/c2g4oS 1 hr ago
  • .@BookCourt Have thought about writing to the shooter's grandkids, but it's a little awkward to know how to begin. 2 hrs ago
  • Er, I meant to say that a lot of amateur genealogists want to find out that THEY'RE (not their) related to Queen Elizabeth, or something. 2 hrs ago
  • .@BookCourt Also, one of my granddad's (supposedly thirteen, I've found six) wives shot him in the stomach. http://bit.ly/cr09l3 2 hrs ago
  • Recently I joined 23andme, which does genetics-based genealogy, and it's hilarious to see people trying to wriggle out of cold, hard science 2 hrs ago
  • Turns out a lot of people don't really want their trees tied to yours on ancestry.com when you put this kind of stuff on there. 2 hrs ago
  • And after getting out of jail, he came after my great-granddad in retaliation for his testimony at the trial. 2 hrs ago
  • Last month I found deeper background in old Texas criminal cases. Guy he killed had been convicted of attempting to rape his stepdaughter. 2 hrs ago
  • A couple years ago I verified the story about my great-granddad killing a man (in self-defense) with a hay hook. http://bit.ly/dpf5Yh 2 hrs ago
  • The genealogical information available online these days, if you're willing to hunt in multiple archives, is amazing. 2 hrs ago
  • 1,700 recorded oral histories from immigrants who came through Ellis Island available free online starting today: http://bit.ly/cTaBpX 2 hrs ago
  • More updates...

Subscribe

FTC Disclaimer

Search

Archives