Diviners by Rick Moody

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: September 2005
  • 576pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2005
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Format: Hardcover, 576pp

    Synopsis

    During one month in the autumn of election year 2000, scores of movie-business strivers are focused on one goal: getting a piece of an elusive, but surely huge, television saga, the one that opens with Huns sweeping through Mongolia and closes with a Mormon diviner in the Las Vegas desert; the sure-to-please-everyone multigenerational TV miniseries about diviners, those miracle workers who bring water to perpetually thirsty (and hungry and love-starved) humankind. Among the wannabes: Vanessa Meandro, hot-tempered head of Means of Production, an indie film company; her harried and varied staff; a Sikh cab driver, promoted to the office of -theory and practice of TV; a bipolar bicycle messenger, who makes a fateful mis-delivery; two celebrity publicists, the Vanderbilt girls; a thriller writer who gives Botox parties; the daughter of an L.A. big-shot, who is hired to fetch Vanessa+s Krispy Kremes and more; a word man who coined the phrase—inspired by a true story; and a supreme court justice who wants to write the script.A few true artists surface in the course of Moody+s rollicking but intricately woven novel, and real emotion eventually blossoms for most of Vanessa's staff at Means of Production, even herself. THE DIVINERS is a cautionary tale about pointless ambition; a richly detailed look at the interlocking worlds of money, politics, addiction, sex, work, and family in modern America; and a masterpiece of comedy that will bring Rick Moody to a still higher level of appreciation.

    The New York Times Book Review - Stephen Metcalf

    Rick Moody is an exhausting writer, and his prose is virtually impossible to meet halfway. And yet he writes with a firm conviction that Americans have served up to themselves the worst of all possible worlds, a condition well captured by the manic glad-handing of the entertainment industry. In Moody's America, no one possesses either inner resources or a sense of tribal belonging. The more outer-directed we have become, the more impersonal…Moody's writing style is perverse, but its intent is to force this gruesome paradox back on his audience.

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    Biography

    Rick Moody, a child of the 1970s and the privileged middle class of the Northeast, has become a specialist in dissecting both in his novels and short stories, which tend to focus on the troubled state of the nuclear family.

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    Customer Reviews

    Not interestingby Anonymous

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    November 11, 2009: This was so strange and disjointed, I put it down after about 50 pages and traded it in at the used book store. Maybe someone will like it, but it wasn't me.

    The Divinersby Anonymous

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    April 16, 2006: Rick Moody is undoubtedly a talented writer. The Ice Storm is an almost perfectly wrought novel. Purple America is splendid in its pathos and grandeur. Unfortunately, the Diviners is disappointing. The novel is a baggy, corpulent monster of a book - with a huge cast of characters, multiple focal points, and the street directory of New York thrown in for good measure. Moody has some good moments - the description of express messenger bike-riders as centaurs is inspired. However, he wastes his energies with his Nabokovian aspirations for artful prose. The portentous imagery - ranging from the 2000 US elections to the desert quests of diviners - rings somewhat hollow. Moody really needed some ruthless editing to strip away the excesses of the book.


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