Dirtmouth: A Novel

by Alan Singer

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Book cover for Dirtmouth

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A mystery in two voices, Dirtmouth recounts the grisly murder of a young woman on Blackman's Heath, an ancient execution site in the Irish bogs. A pair of archaeologists, the obese and decadent Kraft Dundeed and his furious protege, Roscoe Taste, each contest the other's self-justifying account of the crime while professing passionate love for the victim. Two silences frame their quarrel: Cinna McDermond, the brutalized subject of her lovers' confessions, and a nameless Investigator, whose invisible presence embodies the reader. Against this background of subterranean savagery the competing monologues struggle to unearth a violence that neither can fully remember nor forget. Dirtmouth is the third in a triad of novels by Alan Singer which investigate the entanglements of memory, self and duplicitous will. As in Singer's Memory Wax and The Charnel Imp, Dirtmouth's luxuriant prose enacts its narrators' labyrinthine rationalizations, entangling action in grotesque imagery and dark insinuation, much as Blackman's Heath engulfs its Bronze Age victims. Singer's writing recalls the stylistic virtuosity of John Hawkes and Djuna Barnes and the obsessive ruminations of Beckett's and Poe's narrators. Drawing readers into an interrogation room as vast and constricted as the mind, Dirtmouth explores the archaeology of passion, exhuming crimes that mirror our own.
  • ISBN13 9781573661171
  • Publish Date 31 October 2004
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Publisher The University of Alabama Press
  • Imprint Fiction Collective Two
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 221
  • Language English