![]() ![]() Throughout the story, Sock monkey and Little Fool offer long, well-written, truthful/cynical digressions on death, Disney, and Ding Dongs that only half-relate to the plot and that many will skim. ![]() Long before they split up, Nell had led him into the ministrations of her pedicurist, a drag queen named Tommy who spent his last three teenage years as a woman before becoming a gay man. Stabbed repeatedly, she looks punctured by a baseball bat, but was dead, he knows, before thrown into the river. She’s a former stripper and law student he used to have heavy sex with in law school. ![]() The crime: Little Fool dredges Nell (Helen Cynthia Parenteau) out of the river. Touch me.” And these decomposing dead people are ones you’d rather not see. “You don’t find many dead people with two-inch visibility. ![]() Then the monkey prose lifts and the detail gets dreadfully gripping. This sock monkey chatters about everything, tirelessly, exhaustingly, mind-numbingly. That is already far more interesting that Sock’s telling of the first ten pages, which are dreadfully dull. The narrator is Dickie, a sock monkey owned by the Little Fool, Clayton Fraser Benz, a six-feet-four police officer who is part of a dive team and spends his working hours in a rubber suit searching through sewage and river water. Debut solo novel by magician Jillette, half of the Penn-Teller team that has published three nonfiction works ( Penn and Teller’s Cruel Tricks for Dear Friends, etc., not reviewed). ![]()
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