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Carnivore Diet: A Novel

Carnivore Diet: A Novel

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Author: Julia Slavin
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Category: Book

List Price: $13.95
Buy New: $2.78
You Save: $11.17 (80%)



New (17) Used (7) from $2.77

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 1142521

Media: Paperback
Pages: 288
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.8

ISBN: 0393328759
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780393328752
ASIN: 0393328759

Publication Date: August 14, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A wildly imaginative tragicomedy about a fantastical animal on the prowl and its affection for one troubled family. "Carnivore Diet gleams with grisly absurdity…bracingly inventive."—Time Out New York

Wendy Dunleavy is desperately trying to hold her family together. But with her politician husband in prison for corruption and her son, Dylan, the former child actor, running unsupervised through the orderly avenues of northwest Washington, she may not have enough muscle for the task. And that's before the first sighting of the mysterious chagwa, a famished and unruly menace that not only breaks up the all-important Beltway soirees but also seems to have intentions toward Dylan. Life might be easier if she weren't addicted to sedatives like the rest of the frightened population. Life might be easier if it weren't always a diet of misery, hilarity, longing, and surprise in a nation of hucksters, self-deluding lobbyists, and pundits.

Known for her "haunting and inventive" storytelling (Harper's Bazaar), her laugh-out-loud repartee, and her surreal transfigurations of the commonplace, Julia Slavin has unleashed a hilarious and disturbing tale where the reach of fantasy is as long as the arm of the federal government. Reading group guide included.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Remarkable read   November 28, 2006
John Arnholz (Washington, DC United States)
I have now re-read Julia Slavin's remarkable novel and find it as wonderful the second time around as the first. Highly creative, yet not improbable. A great read.


4 out of 5 stars Unlike any other book out there today   November 25, 2005
Jessica Lux (Rosamond, CA)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

There is no other book to compare Slavin to, no genre to toss Carnivore Diet in. It's a drama, for sure, with elements of fantasy thrown in, along with a healthy dose of political and social commentary. It has the bizarre-ness of a Vonnegut novel, complete with the commentary on modern society, yet her fantasy world seems real, seems believable. It's almost as if one might wake up in 15 years to a world exactly as bizarre as the one Slavin sets her novel in.

Carnivore Diet focuses on the Dunleavy family, torn apart by politics, crime, and drugs. Dad Matt is a former congressman incarcerated on scandalous charges. Mom Wendy is at home coping with some serious drugs that she has to cajole out of her doctors. Teenaged Dylan has lost most of his friends, not told his mom, and is about to lose his lucrative job voicing a character on the most popular cartoon on television. Oh, and by the way, a hermaphroditic carnivorous beast is stalking Washington DC and the Dunleavy house and trying to eat Dylan. America is bizarre, filled with strange politicians, mood altering and life-ruining prescription drugs, and a reality-to-the-max show in which contestants live and die in a Colonial world (no access to any anachronistic medicine or tools).

Slavin has created a surreal yet vividly real snapshot of America, and her book is recommended to anyone who wants a break from the "usual fare."



4 out of 5 stars WOW!   August 28, 2005
Bilbo Baggins (Timbuktu)
6 out of 8 found this review helpful

An itchy, goosepimply, weird, thought provoking kind of read. I think I dug it pretty much, and would recommend it for the sheer audacity and excitment. I would also recommend another author, only because I've been reading alot lately, the first book of a new series entitled "A Monumental Journey" by Richard L Cederberg. Very good, exciting, endearing characters. Excellent content . . . I would recommend both quite highly!


3 out of 5 stars A fiendish allegory   July 12, 2005
Luan Gaines (Dana Point, CA USA)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

I'm not usually a fan of humorous novels, but Slavin is inordinately clever, her skewed take on suburban Washington D.C. full of bind-boggling images and the tensions of today's reality. Wendy Dunleavy's husband, Matt, a former Congressman, is incarcerated; her son Dylan has just lost a lucrative job as the voice of a cartoon character, Harlan, puberty assailing his once high-pitched vocal chords. To add to the drama, the neighborhood is under attack by a mysterious animal, a chagwa, a sometimes-carnivorous mythological hermaphroditic beast.

The only way Wendy can cope with her out-of-control existence is on a diet of sleeping pills and mood enhancers, glued to the local TV station that reports sightings of the monster-at-large. With no husband to protect her, in a land of ubiquitous politicians and random social causes, Wendy is unmoored, beset with fears and insecurities, as fourteen-year old Dylan stands by helplessly. Washington D.C. is not a place for the faint-of-heart, Wendy and Dylan the objects of interest and curiosity in a city that knows virtually everything about everybody. D.C. is literally licking its chops, chasing the fearsome chagwa and dissecting those in the spotlight, where a woman alone is ripe fruit to be picked.

Fantasy abounds, beasts and monsters, not to mention nosy neighbors who feast on someone else's downfall. Wendy and Dylan are dragged into a changing future, kicking and screaming. Wendy has her own metamorphosis, while Dylan holds down the home fort with all of the other "Harlan's" who have played the voice of the cartoon character over the years. Only the chagwa is oblivious, attacking the Dunleavy's house, demanding meat. The citizens mobilize, cooperating in mutual need. Is Slavin's bizarre, dark vision a hallucination or another version of reality? Perhaps the beast is allegorical, usurping reason as families disintegrate. It's all in the eye (or mind) of the beholder: "If we feel more secure on the outside, we can begin to change on the inside." Luan Gaines/2005.


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