Any God Will Do: Difference between revisions
imported>Hayford Peirce (added to the lede) |
imported>Hayford Peirce (more in the lede -- the sommelier who shoots himself over losing a bet about white wine and lamb) |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
{{Image|Any God Will Do cover.jpg|left|150px|Cover of the 1966 Random House first edition.}} | {{Image|Any God Will Do cover.jpg|left|150px|Cover of the 1966 Random House first edition.}} | ||
'''Any God Will Do''', first published by Random House in 1966, is the sixth book by the American satirist and political novelist [[Richard Condon]]. After the almost unmitigated grimness of his previous book, ''An Infinity of Mirrors'', it was a return to his more usual light-heartedness as displayed in works such ''A Talent for Loving''. Although its theme is madness, unusually for Condon it has | '''Any God Will Do''', first published by Random House in 1966, is the sixth book by the American satirist and political novelist [[Richard Condon]]. After the almost unmitigated grimness of his previous book, ''An Infinity of Mirrors'', it was a return to his more usual light-heartedness as displayed in works such ''A Talent for Loving''. Although its theme is madness, unusually for Condon it has little of the almost gratuitous scenes of violence and sudden deaths that punctuate most of his books—the only notable instance being that of a haughty French ''[[sommelier]]'' who shoots himself at an aristocratic dinner party when he discovers that an American guest is indeed correct in asserting that a great white Burgundy can accompany young spring lamb. | ||
==Critical reception== | ==Critical reception== |
Revision as of 14:52, 31 May 2010
Any God Will Do, first published by Random House in 1966, is the sixth book by the American satirist and political novelist Richard Condon. After the almost unmitigated grimness of his previous book, An Infinity of Mirrors, it was a return to his more usual light-heartedness as displayed in works such A Talent for Loving. Although its theme is madness, unusually for Condon it has little of the almost gratuitous scenes of violence and sudden deaths that punctuate most of his books—the only notable instance being that of a haughty French sommelier who shoots himself at an aristocratic dinner party when he discovers that an American guest is indeed correct in asserting that a great white Burgundy can accompany young spring lamb.
Critical reception
Title
The title, as is the case in six of Condon's first seven books, is derived from the last line of a typical bit of Condonian doggerel that supposedly comes from a fictitious Keener's Manual mentioned in many of his earlier novels:
- Interest is the key to life,
- Interest in the clue,
- Interest is the drum and fife
- And any god will do.
- Interest is the key to life,
The verse is found in only one place, as an epigraph on a blank page four pages after the title page and two pages before the beginning of the text.[1] Unlike some of Condon's other books, however, in which the verse is clearly relevant to the theme of the book, this particular title, Any God Will Do, has no apparent relevance to what happens in the course of the novel.
Theme
Characters
Typical Condon quirks and characteristics
References
- ↑ The entire verse is in italics. Any God Will Do, Random House, New York, 1966, Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 66-21462