Namaste Mart Confidential Andrew Miller I’ve previously savoured several shorter pieces of Andrew Miller’s fiction, so I was eager to get hold of his debut novel, knowing what he was capable of on the page. And Namaste Mart Confidential surpassed expectations. This is damned fine writing. The cover blurb calls it a “wild ride” and that is no understatement. Miller has a wonderfully fertile imagination and we end up with this fantastically fun cast of characters, from the two protagonists, Adam and Richie, who moonlight as unlicenced PIs from their jobs at the Mart, to gangsters, cops, celebrities and their shallow sycophants, religious freaks, and a missing lingerie shop girl. Some of the cast are likeable, some are certainly not, but all are believable and the interplays between them are finely crafted. It's got the solid storyline of a good mystery, but it’s so much more. At times it feels like a classic farce, with wonderful humour, but also truly biting satire of modern L.A. society, and not just L.A. for that matter. Miller’s satirical skewering of the cult of celebrity and of the religious cults, to name two of the main targets, is simply delicious to read. Namaste Mart Confidential will make a superb black comedy on the screen, and that day can’t come fast enough. Meantime, take a read of this riotous romp. Thank you, Mr Miller, and bring on your next gem. Cheers, ABP |
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