When his wife, Norma, runs off with her lover, taking with her Ray's credit cards and his Ford Torino, Ray sets off in pursuit, journeying from Arkansas through Texas and Mexico to a remote plantation in Honduras
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Charles Portis may be the sneakiest comedian in American letters, not to mention one of the funniest. And there's no better specimen of his double-edged art than The Dog of the South, which Overlook Press has recently rescued from a long, cruel, out-of-print limbo. As usual, the narrator is a down-at-the-heels Southerner with an eye for the homely detail and a mission to accomplish. What Ray Midge means to do is track down his significant other: "My wife Norma had run off with Guy Dupree and I was waiting around for the credit card billings to come in so I could see where they had gone." In another author's hands, this opening sentence might lead straight to a bloody, noir-ish denouement. Here it's merely the excuse for a meandering, semi-pointless quest, during which the fussbudget protagonist is assailed by tropical storms, grifters, hippies, car trouble, and even an assortment of airborne trash: "I had to keep the Buick speed below what I took to be about sixty because at that point the wind came up through the floor hole in such a way that the Heath wrappers were suspended behind my head in a noisy brown vortex."
Hapless, rhetorically challenged Ray Midge would more than fulfill any novel's quota for comic creation. But Portis pairs him with another indelible nutter, Dr. Reo Symes. A font of dubious financial schemes, Symes attaches himself to Ray like a peevish, passive-aggressive Pancho Sanza, and his non-sequitur-studded riffs must be heard to be believed:
I always tried to help Leon and you see the thanks I got. I hired him to drive for me right after his rat died. He was with the Murrell Brothers Shows at that time, exhibiting a fifty-pound rat from the sewers of Paris, France. Of course it didn't really weigh fifty pounds and it wasn't your true rat and it wasn't from Paris, France, either. It was some kind of animal from South America. Anyway, the thing died and I hired Leon to drive for me. I was selling birthstone rings and vibrating jowl straps from door to door and he would let me out at one end of the block and wait on me at the other end.The vibrating jowl straps are the kicker here, of course. But it's the overall futility of the enterprise that gives Symes his comic potency, and makes him Ray's natural companion in arms. Neither of these guys is going to accomplish anything: they're Beckett clowns in Sansabelt trousers, too enervated by the heat even to agonize. Still, you won't find a more delicious (or less reliable) narrator in contemporary fiction, and Charles Portis's genius for inventing all-American eccentrics is anything but futile. --James Marcus
Charles Portis lives in Arkansas, where he was born and educated. He served in the Marine Corps during the Korean War, was the London bureau chief of the New York Herald-Tribune, and was a writer for The New Yorker.
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Seller: Lost Books, AUSTIN, TX, U.S.A.
Hard cover. Sewn binding. Cloth over boards. 245 p. Audience: General/trade. Very good in good dust jacket. Jacket has a few tears along edges, now in mylar. Seller Inventory # Alibris.0011982
Seller: Lost Books, AUSTIN, TX, U.S.A.
Hard cover. Sewn binding. Cloth over boards. 245 p. Audience: General/trade. Very good in very good dust jacket. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket in mylar. Seller Inventory # Alibris.0016082
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Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. First edition stated. 5 3/4 x 8 1/2 Book; binding tight, straight boards have modest foxing to front quarter cloth and mild foxing to rear quarter cloth; moderate foxing to top edge with minor soiling to bottom edge and small short gift presentation to half title page in blue pen else text free of marks, appears barely read. Dust jacket ($8.95) has mild bumping and chipping with small paper loss to mostly spine and flap fold ends with mild fading to spine. Color sharp to covers. Under archival quality mylar cover. Photos upon request. Packed well and shipped in a sturdy box. Seller Inventory # 101320BRR.
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Hard Cover. Condition: Very Good +. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition/1st Printing. SIGNED by author on a bookplate affixed to half-tilte page (signature and date only). DJ by Paul Bacon. $8.95 price present on DJ flap; mylar protected. Author's third (and very comical) novel. Note: No International orders for this item. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Signed by Author. Seller Inventory # 044724
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