| To Hell with the Harp! | ||||||||||
| M.K. Twigg | ||||||||||
| Emissary Publishing, 204 pages | ||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
That doesn't mean publishers are going to buy. Here's where the logic breaks
down. To Hell with the Harp! wins a prestigious humour award, and publishers ignore it. Their loss.
Slap a good cover on it, give it minimal support, and you could have another
Terry Pratchett on your hands. Okay, look past the not-so-hot cover art and dig into the good stuff.
Put a bungling demon in charge of the fires of Hell and you're asking for
trouble. Add one ineffectual angel and disaster is unavoidable. There is no way these
two clowns are going to do anything but make matters worse. The last thing the situation
needs is more players, but who is going to say no to the Devil and one seriously
pissed-off Zeus? Mix in televangelists, constables, re-animated corpses, and various
demi-gods and things are going straight to... well... hell.
It might sound like Twigg is encroaching on Good Omens territory, but
To Hell with the Harp! is all his own creation. Twigg's take on the end of
the world avoids the darkness of Gaiman and Pratchett's vision and goes for a more
farcical slant. (Don't get me wrong -- Good Omens is rivetted forever in
my all-time best list.) Both approaches succeed admirably and deserve to attract a wide audience.
To Hell with the Harp! is loaded with strange and irrepressible characters,
with even stranger ideas. The predicaments they stumble into and create grow ever
more impossible and ludicrous until it seems no one will be able to end the chaos and save the world.
Did I mention they have only so much time to repair the damage they caused?
After that, bye-bye world.
Twigg handles the action well, and it's a lot to control. Or, perhaps, it was out
of control all along and he pulled it out at the last second.
Either way, it's a wild, hysterical ride and you'll be strapped in for the duration,
laughing all the way -- ha ha ha.... There is as bit of a slowdown in the final
pages, but it's nothing you can't live with; besides, you'll be too caught up by then to care.
To Hell with the Harp! is like finding a previously unknown Douglas Adams or Ben Elton
manuscript just when you think you can't wait any longer for the next book. An early
effort that was passed over. Not as polished, maybe, but give him a couple more novels
and then make the comparison again.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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