Vulgar Things
By (Author) Lee Rourke
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
2nd July 2015
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
240
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 15mm
170g
The second novel from Lee Rourke, author of the cult hit The Canal.
Jon Michaels a divorced, disaffected and fatigued editor living a nondescript life in North London wakes one morning to a phone call informing him that his uncle has been found dead in his caravan on Canvey Island. Dismissed from his job only the day before and hung-over, Jon reluctantly agrees to sort through his uncles belongings and clear out the caravan. What follows is a quixotic week on Canvey as Jon, led on by desire and delusion, purposeful but increasingly disorientated, unfolds a disturbing secret, ever more enchanted by the island its landscape and its atmosphere.
Haunted and haunting, Vulgar Things is part mystery, part romance, part odyssey: a novel in which the menial entrances and the banal compels.
Sad, lost men looking for maps in the starry Essex sky, small-town strippers, absent mothers, angry brothers, planets photographed on smart phones, cider and a lot of rare steak Rourke is on his way to becoming the J. G. Ballard of Southend-on-Sea. Deborah Levy
The poetry of estuary landscapes muddy creeks, silhouettes of refineries, the slow passage of giant container ships, the flat horizon shines through Lee Rourkes prose with a black luminescence. Tom McCarthy
As poignant and unsettling as a beam of light hitting the night sky from across the far-off wastes. Eimear McBride
A consistently disturbing yet compelling vision of loss, violence and identity, Vulgar Things stalks the readers memory long after the last page. A novel of innovation and resonance, it is as bleak and as beautiful as a deserted coastline. Stuart Evers
Rourke now shares a publisher with Jonathan Franzen Admirers may rest assured that in other respects Rourke has not sold out Rourke writes under the spell of The Waste Land [For T. S. Eliot] the sense that literature must embrace modern life wrestled with an equivalent urge to grip it in tweezers, nose held. You feel the same tension at work in Vulgar Things. Anthony Cummins, Literary Review
Lee Rourke is the author of the short-story collection Everyday, the novel The Canal (winner of the Guardian's Not The Booker Prize 2010) and the poetry collection Varroa Destructor. He is Writer-in-Residence at Kingston University, where he is an MFA lecturer in creative writing and critical theory. He lives by the sea.