Supernatural thrills and social commentary collide in Duncan's dark and comic tale of a lone werewolf
If you've had your fill of dreamy teen vampires, then Glen Duncan's new novel, "The Last Werewolf," will give you a reason, in the immortal words of Ozzy Osbourne, to bark at the moon.
The serious literary crowd can't bring itself to take any of the genre stuff seriously: Tales of werewolves, vampires and other fantastic creatures are just too low-brow for them. (Time's better spent reading another novel of middle-class family dysfunction, I guess.) But Duncan's book offers those deeper, reflective surfaces that they might crave: No one broods on history and irony more than his narrator, Jacob Marlowe, even if his meditations get interrupted every 30 days or so by an absolute hunger for flesh.
read on
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Book review: 'The Last Werewolf' by Glen Duncan
True Blood in Dallas: Book review: 'The Last Werewolf' by Glen DuncanTweet this! Posted by " Dallas " at 8:38 AM
Labels: books, werewolves
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