The Happiest People in the World: A Novel
A satirical spy thriller follows the misadventures of a political cartoonist, who after triggering uprisings with a controversial comic accepts CIA protection in a small upstate New York town, only to become enmeshed in a complicated love affair involving several agents. By the best-selling author of An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England. Simultaneous.
Read More
&;[A] dark and funny satire . . . Infidelities, secret identities and double-crosses . . . Reflects the absurdity of any country obsessed with spying on its own people.&; &;The Wall Street Journal Take the format of a spy thriller, shape it around real-life incidents involving international terrorism, leaven it with dark, dry humor, toss in a love rectangle, give everybody a gun, and let everything play out in the outer reaches of upstate New York--there you have an idea of Brock Clarke&;s new novel. Filled with wonder and anger in almost equal parts,The Happiest People in the World is a ripped-from-the-headlines tale of paranoia and the all-American obsession with security and the conspiracies that threaten it. &;A literary first: a book that feels like the love child of Saul Bellow and Hogan&;s Heroes, full of authorial cartwheels of comedy and profundity.&; &;GQ &;The Happiest People in the World begins with a raucous bar scene featuring party streamers, smoke, prone bodies, spilled fluids and a stuffed moose with a surveillance camera in its left eye . . . [Clarke has] success in dreaming up oddball originals that have instant appeal.&; &;Janet Maslin, The New York Times &;[Clarke] creates books that taste like delicious cuts of absurdity marbled with erudition.&; &;The Washington Post &;A whiz-bang spy satire bundled in an edgy tale of redemption . . . His comedy of errors is impossible to put down.&; &;Publishers Weekly, starred review &;A darkly hilarious novel . . . The writing is clever, the dialogue snappy and understated, and the effect is as pleasantly unsettling as anything Kurt Vonnegut Jr. ever wrote.&; &;The Portland Sun &;A zany and fast-paced book that explores the myriad ways people of all nations make themselves and others unhappy.&; &;Chicago Tribune, Printer&;s Row &;Ranks among the funniest and most relevant social satires I&;ve read . . . It might just make you the happiest reader in the world.&; &;The Dallas Morning News
Read Less