The Royal Family: A Novel
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About the Author

William T Vollmann is the author of six novels and three collections of stories. He won the PEN Centre USA West Award for Fiction for The Atlas and was named one of the twenty best writers under 40 by the New Yorker. His journalism and fiction has been published in The New York Times, Esquire and Spin. He lives in California.

Reviews

"A magnificent new novel from a writer whose books tower over the work of his contemporaries." - The Washington Post; "...a monster, a monster of talent, ambition and accomplishment." - Los Angeles Times; "Vollman has created a haunting, disturbing and magnificent novel..." - San Diego Tribune; "Nothing approaches the wild ambition on display in this book... This is exactly the kind of storytelling that the novel was invented for." - San Francisco Chronicle

John Tyler is a successful San Francisco attorney with a yuppie lifestyle whose brother Henry is a scruffy private investigator. John is married to a Korean woman named Irene; Henry is in love with his brother!s wife. When Irene commits suicide, Henry embarks on a mission to track down the Queen of the Prostitutes, the legendary protector of the city!s streetwalkers, while John buries himself in legal work for a glitzy Las Vegas nightclub. Very much like Vollmann!s earlier collection The Rainbow Stories (LJ 6/15/89), The Royal Family offers an obsessively detailed tour of the sex trade in San Francisco, yet the new book attempts to link the individual vignettes with a fratricidal Cain-and-Abel frame story. Like most of the author!s work, this behemoth is a genre-defying mix of neo-noir, K-Mart realism, New Age claptrap, and unabashed editorializing. The New Yorker recently named Vollmann one of the best American writers under 40. But unlike his contemporaries, Vollmann shuns postmodern irony and is really much closer in spirit to the great 19th-century muckrakers. Many readers will find this gritty book highly offensive; others will be won over by the author!s passion. Recommended for larger fiction collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/00.]"Edward B. St. John, Loyola Law Sch. Lib., Los Angeles Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Ambitious in style, in range, and in sheer volume, Vollmann's massive new novel continues the controversial projects of Whores for Gloria and Butterfly Stories, in which the prolific author aims to create a detailed fictional map of a modern-day red-light district and of the people who try to live there. John Tyler is a successful San Francisco lawyer; his brother, Henry, is a dodgy private eye in love with John's Korean wife, Irene. When Irene commits suicide, the siblings' bitterness becomes apparent. A grieving Henry frequents the prostitutes of SF's notorious Tenderloin district; John edges towards marrying his mistress, Celia. A brutal businessman named Brady has hired Henry to track down the "Queen of Whores." Pedophile and police informant Dan Smooth finally leads Henry to the Queen, an African-American woman of indeterminate age and immense psychological insight. Rather than turn her over to Brady, Henry warns her about him. Gradually the Queen helps Henry shed his grief for Irene by leading him down the dark, dank staircase of sexual and social degradation. He learns about masochism, golden showers and other unusual practicesDand about love. But the Queen's command of her realm is imperiled: Brady wants to import her Tenderloin prostitutes for his Las Vegas sex emporium. Vollmann is after large-scale social chronicle; he includes characters from nearly every walk of life, and trains his attentions on processes not often seen by the faint of heart: cash flow, blood flow, phone sex, Biblical apocrypha (the Book of Nirgal) and the body odor of crackheads. But this hypperrealistic novelist also aims to present a metaphysics: the two brothers stand for two kinds of human being, the chosen and the outcast. As in all Vollmann's novels, the author's encylopedic ambition sometimes overwhelms the human scale; some supporting characters, though, do stay vivid. Vollmann avoids simply glamorizing the outcasts but remains, deep down, a Blakean romantic: prostitution is for him not only the universal indictment of the human race but also, paradoxically, the only paradise we can actually visit. 5-city author tour. (Aug.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

"A magnificent new novel from a writer whose books tower over the work of his contemporaries." - The Washington Post; "...a monster, a monster of talent, ambition and accomplishment." - Los Angeles Times; "Vollman has created a haunting, disturbing and magnificent novel..." - San Diego Tribune; "Nothing approaches the wild ambition on display in this book... This is exactly the kind of storytelling that the novel was invented for." - San Francisco Chronicle

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