So He Takes the Dog

So He Takes the Dog

by JonathanBuckley (Author)

Synopsis

A stunning new novel from the author of 'Ghost MacIndoe' and 'Invisible'. In his previous two novels, Jonathan Buckley has brilliantly explored the workings of this country over the last few decades: in 'Ghost MacIndoe' he examined the extraordinary life of an ordinary man living in a London suburb; most recently, in 'Invisible', he showed us five disparate lives played out in a decaying hotel struggling to survive the BSE crisis. Now, in 'So He Takes the Dog', Buckley, in his best novel yet, unpicks the emotional subtleties, fears and prejudices and desires of the inhabitants of a town somewhere on the coast of the South of England in the aftermath of a brutal murder. A dog, out for a walk on the beach, returns to its owner with a human hand in its mouth. The hand belongs to Henry, the homeless eccentric who has been wandering the south-west of England for the last thirty years, most recently living rough in the town. The local policeman and his accomplice, in piecing together his movements prior to his death, talking to those who knew and watched him, uncover an extraordinary life. But their investigations tellingly shed light on the town itself, and the story of Henry and those who tell it begins to affect the narrator-policeman's own life in ways he never expected. 'So He Takes the Dog' is a detective story like no other, a novel that further confirms Jonathan Buckley as one of the finest novelists in this country at work today.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Publisher: Fourth Estate
Published: 17 Jul 2006

ISBN 10: 0007228309
ISBN 13: 9780007228300

Media Reviews
Beautifully quiet novel. It's rare for a contemporary novel to take such care, to defer to such reticence. So He Takes the Dog is a testament to the power of the modest, the gracefulness of the still.' Guardian 'For me, the power of So He Takes The Dog lies in its facility for recording physical quirks that reveal what is going on in people's heads. If this were a traditional whodunit, the resolution would be frustrating but the melancholy, upside-down tale is so beautifully written that the ending is nothing of the kind. This is a hugely satisfying read.' Daily Express 'Buckley is expert at stringing together the tiny dramas of individual lives to make a narrative necklace.' Daily Mail 'Affecting, carefully crafted, quietly tumultuous. The elusiveness of our emotionally stunted sleuth is its greatest achievement.' The Times Literary Supplement 'Buckley is writing about people, about the fallout of violence and the dynamics of difficult relationships. This is a superbly understated story, one surprisingly difficult to shake off.' Sunday Business Post 'Rewarding!managed with aplomb. There are some lovely, slightly unsettling images -- mushrooms blooming on the walls of a damp flat when the narrator and his wife first meet, a heron pursued by crows flying towards the sun -- and a real sense of the rhythms of suburban life. (A novel) about what it means to live in today's Britain, about the slow drawing-in of dreams and the facing of reality and what happens when that starts to go wrong. George Orwell would almost certainly have approved.' The Observer
Author Bio
Jonathan Buckley lives in Brighton. He is the author of four previous novels, The Biography of Thomas Lang (1997), Xerxes (1999), Ghost MacIndoe (2001) and Invisible (2004).