No More Mr. Nice Guy
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Average customer review:Product Description
Frank is a television critic. His partner, Melissa, an author of pornographic novels for women. Sick of his life and their fighting, Frank decides its time to go. But go where? And do what? And what happens when sex is all you know but no longer what you want?
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #232616 in Books
- Published on: 1999-05-06
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 260 pages
Editorial Reviews
Sunday Times
‘A savage and scabrously entertaining sex comedy, the likes of which I have not encountered since Philip Roth’s masterly Sabbath’s Theater’
Daily Telegraph
‘Howard Jacobson is one of the funniest writers alive…his writing pulsates with nerve and edge; it is colossal in comic precision’
Observer
‘Howard Jacobson is one of the funniest writers around…It’s hard to imagine a more entertaining book’
Customer Reviews
A book about irony, self-discovery and lament.
Howard Jacobson's fiction is all about irony, self-discovery and lament. No More Mister Nice Guy is no exception. Frank Ritz, a celebrated and successful TV critic, is thrown out of his own house by his partner, Mel, who writes feminist erotica. So begins Frank's personal odyssey in search of meaning about his own sexuality. He gets in his car and visits all the places that have been sexual 'milestones' in his own life. What we as readers get along the way are ribald, earthy and, most importantly, extremely funny depictions and comments about man's basic urges and needs. In its own way, this book is Jacobson's updated version of Portnoy's Complaint. But with a Mancunian accent!
And the irony and lament? These lie in the fact that Jacobson produces his own work of erotica that uses increasingly graphic description and language to support the increasing despair felt by the central character. By the end, all Frank's sexual excess cannot compensate for the passage of time, the loss of friends, and his feelings of inadequacy. Frank is finally portrayed as a victim not a villain.
Above all, this novel once again highlights Jacobson's gift of expression; one that is almost unique among contemporary authors. The chatty, loquacious and literate use of language (with its puns, sardonic asides, Yiddishisms, and quotes from other texts), flows so easily that you feel, at times, that you are reading a script from one of his own television documentaries. It is the writing of someone who wants, and knows how, to communicate ideas. But, as ever, this is done with a loud guffaw rather than a straight face.
Very male, very real.
This was a great read. An exploration into the main man, Frank’s, mind was a whirlwind ride of hilarity that you could imagine your father, brother or partner going through. A mid life crisis he carries off in complete style. What's more you don't begrudge him one mind boggling second of it! An entertaining read. This book reminds me why I read books, for shock, fun, and insight.
I'm no prude but........
Was it really necessary to be so disgusting? What with hairbushes, prostitutes and lesbian sex, I don't think the book needed it. A journey indeed, one i just wanted over and done. I'd call the book a real page turner as I couldn't turn pages quick enough to get to the end. What was that all about at the end, going in to a monastry? I thought I'd missed something.Didn't get it at all. Yes, funny moments that made me smile but too many more that made me cringe. I chucked the book in the end, not one I'd lend to a friend.





