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Puckoon (1976)

Puckoon (1976)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.85 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0140023747 (ISBN13: 9780140023749)
Language
English
Publisher
penguin books

About book Puckoon (1976)

I imagine had I reviewed this in my Goon-loving, Milligan-adoring mid-teens heyday it would've got five stars, no problems. The thing is twenty years have passed since I was 16, and the times have a-changed.Clearly I've got older, and I suppose we all grow out of certain phases of likes and dislikes. I'm not saying I've become more discerning or refined, more my tastes and horizons have expanded, all of which now make Puckoon markedly less "the funniest thing ever", which I thought in 1988.More obviously, *any* jokes based on racial stereotypes just aren't funny anymore. Given Puckoon is entirely peopled by larger-than-life Englishmen, Irishmen, a Chinaman and one-eyed Lascar sailor, it has all the ingredients of one of Bernard Manning's favourite jokes. Although to be fair to Milligan (and avoiding the usual 'of his time' cliches), pretty much everybody gets it regardless of creed or colour, but if you remove the schoolboy sniggering, the whole thing turns into a surreal novel, and surreal isn't necessarily 'funny'.Having said all of that, what amazed me most this time around were the things I took from re-reading that I'd never noticed before; the revealing insights into Milligan's character, the hints of depression in the foreward, the description of Dan's upbringing in Poona, and his dislike of modern architecture. No wonder Prince Charles liked him.

Somewhere amongst this tale of a small Irish village split in two by the powers that be, a story threatens to break out - but that's really not the point of Puckoon.Born out of the fevered mind of one of modern literature's most surreal writers, this is more a journey through the manic brain of Milligan.The author has chats with his main character, the IRA smuggle explosives over the new border in a coffin, a puma escapes and a Chinese immigrant turns out to be quite the policeman.There is no linear plot, and even within each vignette Milligan happily gets sidetracked, but with each fresh page comes another laugh - or at the very least a smile.No one is safe - the Irish, the English, authority figures and terrorists are all lampooned with equal glee. And amidst the chaos, pertinent points are made but never laboured.Knowing what was to come from this man, Puckoon is a great glimpse into a mind that hadn't yet got a handle on it's own humour.The saddest thing is that, today, this would not get printed. You can almost hear modern publishers muttering 'I don't get it'.

Do You like book Puckoon (1976)?

Umm. Well. It's well-known Spike Milligan had a depressive disorder, making it impossible for him to concentrate on one thing for a long time. Hence his role in the Goons and other digressional comedies. But random doesn't lend itself to novels. You can throw in Romans, Chinamen, IRA officers and the kitchen sink, but you still have to structure the thing.Puckoon is a dated book, probably quite sexist and racist to modern eyes, and the freewheeling absurdity simply doesn't shine on the page, though there are quotable lines a-go-go. Just no novel.
—MJ Nicholls

It's been quite some time since I lined up at the bookstore counter to meet Mr Milligan and have my copy of Puckoon signed. This book will forever hold a tender to my heart. It made me laugh out loud, miss my bus stop when travelling home and saw me buy copies for my friends. It took Milligan 2 years to write this, no doubt while he was in the thrrawl of th Q Series. As one of the greatest comedic talents of the last century it is clear that he had lots of fun writing this one down. He has written his bio, several revisions on the great classics and lots of children's stories and verse. The only serious work was a play "The Bedsitting Room". As this is his only true novel. Believe me it is hard to write funny and there are few examples (Lennie Lower is one).From the man who created a whole new measure of radio media this book deserves to be read.
—Genean

Almost got two stars thanks to the following, the best description of Belfast I've ever read. Almost but not quite. -- “Belfast is a big city. At one time it was quite small, even worse, there had been an occasion when there was no Belfast City at all. Thank heaven, those days are gone and there is now plentiful supply of Belfast. Ugly and grey it spreads out, drab, dull, lack-lustre streets, crammed with the same repetitive, faceless, uninspired, profit-taking, soul-breaking buildings. The only edifices worth seeing are those erected long before the coming of the local council and the builder. Beautiful buildings seemed to taunt them. ‘Pull them down!’ was the cry. ‘The Highway must go through.’ The world, beauty, tranquillity and fresh air were being sacrificed to a lump of compressed tin with a combustion engine. Stately trees were felled as a ‘Danger to lightening’, and when one questioned them the answer came from a faceless thing called ‘Spokesman said’. Here, safe in its bureaucratic cocoon, we had the new vandalism of authority, power without conscience or taste; as it was with Belfast so was it with other cities, for now and ever after it seemed.” --
—Garrett

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