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Murder in Mount Holly

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"A Vonnegut tinged absurdist satire . . . (a) tightly paced, expertly drawn comic romp" from the New York Times–bestselling author of The Mosquito Coast (LitReactor).
Paul Theroux, one of the world's most popular authors, both for his travel books and his fiction, has produced an off-beat story of 1960s weirdos unlike anything he has ever written.
During the time of Lyndon Johnson's presidency, Herbie Gneiss is forced to leave college to get a job. His income from the Kant-Brake toy factory, which manufactures military toys for children, keeps his chocolate-loving mother from starvation. Mr. Gibbon, a patriotic veteran of three wars, also works at Kant-Brake. When Herbie is drafted, Mr. Gibbon falls in love with Herbie's mother and they move in together at Miss Ball's rooming house. Since Herbie is fighting for his country, Mr. Gibbon feels that he, too, should do something for his country and convinces Miss Ball and Mrs. Gneiss to join him in the venture. They decide to rob the Mount Holly Trust Company because it is managed by a small dark man who is probably a communist. There are some complications.
Combine Donald E. Westlake with Abby Hoffman, add a bit of Gore Vidal at his most vitriolic, and you will have Murder in Mount Holly.
"Parodies the American political fringe at a time when flags burned, hippies protested and commies lurked everywhere . . . you'll have little difficulty inserting today's fringe characters into Theroux's lampoon." —Star Tribune
"The geezer psychopath finally gets his due . . . The fun here is in how hateful the characters are." —The New York Times Book Review
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 3, 2011
      First published in the U.K. in 1969, Theroux’s slight caper novel, set in the small American town of Mount Holly, uneasily mixes dark comedy and violence. Herbie Gneiss, who’s quit college at the urging of his hypochondriac, overweight widowed mother, is looking into work at Kant-Brake Toys, a local factory. After landing a job there, Herbie moves to a rooming house run by Nettie Ball, who has another Kant-Brake employee as a lodger, Charlie Gibbon, “a fuddy-duddy, not a geezer,” who later falls for Herbie’s mom. After Herbie is drafted, Nettie, Charlie, and Mrs. Gneiss decide to rob “a communist bank,” to “prove to the world that old folks still had a lot of spunk left.” Bodies soon start to drop. It’s a subpar effort for the prolific Theroux, best known for his travel books (Ghost Train to the Eastern Star).

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2011

      Nope, no trains and no travel, though one can anticipate Theroux's amusingly acid prose. It's the Sixties, and Herbie Gneiss works at the Kant-Brake factory. When he's drafted, his mother and his colleague, Mr. Gibbon, fall in love and scheme with their landlady to strike a patriotic blow by robbing the Mount Holly Trust Company, whose manager is, they believe, a Communist. Clearly, there's more going on here than your average whodunit has to offer; for mystery fans who like a sophisticated or satiric bent to their work.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2011
      Acclaimed for his travel writing and literary fiction, Theroux seems to have dusted off a quirky manuscript copyrighted in 1969 about three benighted Americans who decide to rob a bank because the country is at stake. Mr. Gibbon has been mustered out of the U.S. Army after 38 years, and his adjustment to civilian life isn't going well. He explains to Miss Ball, a ditzy kindergarten teacher, and Mrs. Gneiss, his lumpen, junk-food-obsessed lover, that the robbery will make the world safe for good government, small government. They commit the crime, murdering a few people along the way, but the bank job isn't the reason to read this very peculiar book. Rather, it's to marvel at Theroux's bizarre characters and his acerbic look at the Vietnam era and the Silent Majority that Richard Nixon identified as his constituency. It's impossible not to see the connection to today's Tea Partiers, who are similarly mad as hell and biblically certain of their own beliefs (though anything but silent). Murder in Mount Holly is a slim twig of a book, but it's howlingly funny and will stay with readers for a long time.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

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