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Hell

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“A novel that explores the darker side of human nature while making you laugh so hard iced tea almost comes out your nose.” —The Tampa Tribune
 
One of American literature’s brightest stars and author of the Pulitzer Prize–winning A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain reimagines the underworld in an uproarious novel. Its main character, Hatcher McCord, is an evening news presenter who has found himself in Hell and is struggling to explain his bad fortune. He’s not the only one to suffer this fate—in fact, he’s surrounded by an outrageous cast of characters, including Humphrey Bogart, William Shakespeare, and almost all of the popes and most of the US presidents. The question may be not who is in Hell, but who isn’t.
 
McCord is living with Anne Boleyn in the afterlife but their happiness is, of course, constantly derailed by her obsession with Henry VIII (and the removal of her head at rather inopportune moments). One day McCord meets Dante’s Beatrice, who believes there is a way out of Hell, and the next morning, during an exclusive on-camera interview with Satan, McCord realizes that Satan’s omniscience, which he has always credited for the perfection of Hell’s torments, may be a mirage—and Butler is off on a madcap romp about good, evil, free will, and the possibility of escape. Butler’s depiction of Hell is original, intelligent, and fiercely comic, a book Dante might have celebrated.
 
“I’ll never stop believing it: Robert Olen Butler is the best living American writer, period.” —Jeff Guinn, Fort Worth Star-Telegram
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 13, 2009
      Prolific Pulitzer–winner Butler features a colorful cast of underworld dwellers in his latest novel, and, as in Severance
      and Intercourse
      , captures stream-of-consciousness in delicious, unleashed rhythm. On the downside, Butler pushes his love for thematic concept to new levels of explicit puppetry (read: gimmick). Hatcher McCord, an anchorman on the Evening News from Hell, reports on hellishly banal traumas while real-life persons suffer hilarious punishment: Adolf Hitler is repeatedly executed, only to be reassembled gruesomely, his face like a stitched football. All are ruled by a smarmy, Armani-clad Satan who smells noxiously of Old Spice aftershave, is only reachable by voice mail and blames everything on his “father issues.” But when McCord discovers that Satan can't read his mind, McCord becomes a vehicle for free will. Newly empowered, he attempts sexual and emotional relations with the love of his afterlife, a headless Anne Boleyn who gives great (if terrifying) oral sex. Butler's lust for the tabloid romp and his stream of the never-ending punch line both irritates and illuminates. The reader's taste will have to be the final arbiters of worth.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from August 15, 2009
      Set in the not-too-distant future, this short novel finds protagonist Hatcher McCord in Hellwhich tends to resemble Earth, with the addition of midday sulfur storms. A network news anchor in life, he's in the same role in the afterlife, hosting the "Evening News from Hell". He's involved with Anne Boleyn, who still longs for the man who done her wrong, and encounters a variety of famous personages, from Virgil and Humphrey Bogart to various U.S. presidents (Richard Nixon is the Devil's chauffeur). Along the way, he hears that a new harrowing of Hell may be imminent and sets about trying to be included by making amends with those he wronged in life (primarily his three ex-wives). In the end, however, Hatcher learns that you can quite literally "make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven." VERDICT One can imagine that Pulitzer Prize winner Butler ("A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain") had a grand time writing this endlessly witty and inventive novel. Readers will find it wildly comic and thought-provoking. [See Prepub Alert, "LJ" 5/15/09.]Lawrence Rungren, Merrimack Valley Lib. Consortium, North Andover, MA

      Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from July 1, 2009
      TV anchorman Hatcher McCord is trying to get a grip on life in Hell, a cacophonous, gridlocked metropolis teeming with gnashing and burning humans, among them Judas, George W. Bush, assorted jihadists, the Bee Gees, William Randolph Hearst, J. Edgar Hoover, Jerry Seinfeld, Humphrey Bogart, and Dantes Beatrice speaking Lauren Bacalls lines. Hatcher is living with Anne Boleyn, who is often disconcertingly headless and pining for Henry VIII. Satan has Hatcher hosting the evening news, but his script is blank while the teleprompter is filled with profanities. Hatcher tries to control his thoughts, believing that Satan customizes hell to match each denizens worst fears, but after launching his daring why do you think youre here? interview series, he realizes that things may not be quite as hideously hopeless as they seem. Butler has been honing his profound empathy and wild imagination in electrifying collections of short fiction. He now unchains himself in this furiously detailed, harrowing, and gruesomely funny satire, taking on everything from genocide to advertising, journalistic ethics to marital bickering. The result is a scorching and cathartic novel of delusion, pain, crimes great and small, just deserts, and the capacity for change.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

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