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Port Mungo by Patrick McGrath
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Port Mungo by Patrick McGrath
Paperback $13.00
Jun 14, 2005 | ISBN 9781400075485

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  • $13.00

    Jun 14, 2005 | ISBN 9781400075485

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  • Jun 01, 2004 | ISBN 9781400043026

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Praise

" A sinister, shifting web of family unrest and intrigue [and a] meditation on the shadowy wellsprings of art and love." —The New York Times Book Review"Taut with suspense and psychologically rich….A compelling read." —The Seattle Times"Steamy, sultry. . . . Richly imagined. . . . A vivid, imaginative exploration of a heart of darkness in which Patrick McGrath pins down love and the sources of art and pain." —Milwaukee Journal Sentinel"Superb….There is no end of mysteries….In his shimmering way, McGrath pulls back the curtain on a terrible one and says, ‘Look!’ When he brings you to that place so adroitly, who can say no?" —Time“Patrick McGrath can write a love story like no other man alive–dark, a little twisted, very passionate, and so loaded with exact and unexpected sensuous detail that, although you may never wish to actually live in this sleazy little city of Port Mungo, you could happily spend a whole vacation within its pages.” –Peter Carey, author of My Life as a Fake
"Engrossing . . . Nuanced . . . Port Mungo offers a portrait of the artist hero that shifts like a hologram [and displays] a restless, mischief-seeking intelligence." —Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Virtuosic. . . . A compelling piece of family Gothic." —The New Yorker
"Powerful. . . . Haunting. . . . Utterly gripping. . . . McGrath deftly crafts [Port Mungo] into a sophisticated psychological exploration of the darker sides of memory, secrecy, desire and guilt. . . . Brace yourself for an enthralling read." —Rocky Mountain News"Luridly fascinating and claustrophobic, a Grand Guignol pageant of cosmic passion, obsessive reflectivity and reprisal. McGrath’s control over vocabulary and tone falter not a whit, and his exploration of the twinned impulses of creativity and despair, genius and moral bankruptcy is riveting." —Memphis Commercial Appeal"Wickedly satisfying and entertaining." —San Francisco Chronicle“Patrick McGrath is a master. . . . He creates fiction that is both taut with suspense and psychologically rich. . . . . Port Mungo is a compelling read.” —Seattle Times-Post Intelligencer"Astoundingly good . . . The outstanding feature of McGrath’s storytelling is his ability to write with tranquil, evocative beauty about the vilest of subjects. Port Mungo is haunting not because of any trickery of reversed expectation or suspended belief, but because we see so completely how damaging the most basic human emotions can be." —O Magazine
"A brilliantly creepy novel about art and madness that will force you to neglect children, housework and everything else until you’ve read its last sentence." —The Guardian (London)"Mythic in scope. . . . [The story] slowly and relentlessly reveals hidden layers of horror. And the revelations, once brought to light, seem not simply logical but inevitable." —The Boston Globe"Beautiful. . . . Jack and Gin, different as their respective spirits, are fine creations. Mr. McGrath has made one speak through the other, which is alchemy." –New York Daily News"Thrilling. . . . His finest work. . . . A passionate story with characters threatening to break apart at any moment . . . [with] an ending that is close to perfect. . . . McGrath’s touch has never been surer.” —Newark Star-Ledger"There are hints of Joseph Conrad in Gin’s account of her brother’s slow, sun-drenched descent into a state of primal impulses, [sustained by] the sheer force of McGrath’s elliptical prose, through his superbly atmospheric evocations of place and mood, and through his proven ability to surprise and horrify readers."–Financial Times"The kind of book that plants a seed in your mind that will germinate days or weeks later . . . A mesmerizing tropical tale with unforgettable characters, and an intriguing new direction for this supremely talented novelist." —Salon"[Gin’s] distinctive voice is a work of art in itself." —Detroit Free Press
"A story of delicacy and not a little humor. The result is that literary rarity: a page-turner of real intelligence, [with] the sort of setting that even Graham Greene might have found too seedy for fiction [and] a finale that is as poignant as it is heart-stopping. A master story-teller has done it again." —The Sunday Telegraph (London)
"This fine novel [is like] a work of papier-mach?, a delicate, translucent piece, made of layers of tissue paper . . . a beautiful obsessive object. . . . McGrath’s storytelling and satiny writing draw us hungrily to the next page." —Lincoln Star Journal"Satisfyingly dark. . . . [McGrath] knows how to keep his readers turning pages." —The Virginian-Pilot"A clever tale [that] offers not only insight into art for art’s sake but the penalties that philosophy incurs. . . . McGrath is an excellent writer who keeps the novel moving at just the right tempo for explication, introspection and a shimmering suspense." —Huntsville Times

Author Essay

A Note from the Author About the Novel

The story of Jack Rathbone and Vera Savage grew out of a longtime interest in the romantic figure of the brilliant but dissolute artist. I began with a painter, a man of excessive appetites who leaves a trail of destruction behind him wherever he goes. I soon realized he was little more than a walking cliche, however, so I turned him into a woman. Things at once became more interesting. Soon the question arose, what kind of a mother would such a woman make? This turned into the thematic core of the book. It took the form of a kind of intense dialogue between creativity, narcissism, indulgence and responsibility.

I was interested at the same time in putting my characters in a tropical setting. I wanted to see the two painters against a Caribbean backdrop, both for the vividness and exoticism of it all, and also to allow them to self-destruct far from the constraints of the homeland and the city. For this purpose I invented Port Mungo, a seedy river town "wilting and steaming in the mangrove swamps of the Gulf of Honduras." Part of the novel concerns the eventful journey from London to Port Mungo. Part of it concerns what happens there. And part concerns the repercussions of those events, as they work themselves out much later in New York.

I took for my narrator a woman called Gin Rathbone, sister of Jack. This gave me the chance to create a further strand in the book, in that I was able to explore, even as the story rolled forward, the complicated geography of a close brother-sister relationship. In its way that relationship turned out every bit as steamy and mysterious as Port Mungo itself.

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