The Dubious Salvation of Jack V.
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Jack Viljee's hometown of Johannesburg is still divided by apartheid, though the old order is starting to crumble. According to eleven-year-old Jack, the world is a rational and simple place. But if life doesn't conform to Jack's expectations, there is always the sympathy and approval of the family's maid to console him. Not that Susie is a pushover. She believes violence, of the nondisfiguring variety, is a healthy form of affection-hence her not infrequent expression "Jack, I love you so much. I will hit you." Jack himself is not above socking his best friend in the eye or scamming his little sister into picking up the dog mess. The Viljee household, in its small way, mirrors the politics of the country.
This noisy domesticity is upset by the arrival of Susie's fifteen-year-old son. Percy is bored, idle, and full of rage. When Percy catches Jack in an indelibly shameful moment, Jack learns that the smallest act of revenge has consequences beyond his imagining. The world, it turns out, is not so simple.
Subversively smart and unapologetically funny, clever and a little dangerous, The Dubious Salvation of Jack V. explores the cost of forgiveness. It is a powerful debut from a fearlessly original voice.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Eleven-year-old Jack Viljee lives in "a very nice house, on a very nice street in the northern suburbs of Johannesburg" in the time of apartheid. Child of an English mother and an Afrikaans father, Jack struggles with adolescence, from the implied queerness of his best friend Petrus to the aging of his grandmother and his impatience with puberty's timing. Still, he prides himself on his ability to move between cultures and maneuver both his friends and his family without letting any of them catch on to his inner self. "My distinguishing characteristic was that I was half English and half Afrikaans, that I could slip unnoticed between the two peoples like a spy," he boasts. Jack's greatest problem comes, however, when he tells a lie involving Susie, his family's beloved housekeeper "my friend, my second mother and, perhaps, in other significant ways, my first" and her 15-year-old son, Percy. The betrayal sends his life and Susie's spinning in unexpected directions. Jack is a delight to follow, and despite his youth and his assertion that "I might have been precocious but I wasn't particularly smart," he proves himself to be a reliable narrator. Strauss uses the child to explore 1980s South Africa, aligning the changes the Viljee clan goes through with those their country is about to face. Although hinging Jack's exit from innocence on his unfortunate encounter with Susie sells short the multifaceted characters' ability to hold the story on their own, the strength of Strauss's storytelling and the indelible impressions his creations make hijack the story in the best possible way. A well-crafted atmospheric debut.