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Mr. Thundermug by Cornelius Medvei — book cover
English, Scottish, & Welsh Fiction, Animals - Fiction, Literary Styles & Movements - Fiction, Humorous Fiction

Mr. Thundermug

by Cornelius Medvei
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Overview

Mr. Thundermug is the inventive, entertaining, and—against all odds—poignant story of an animal who acquires the ability to eloquently speak human language. Using his own beautiful, eerie lithograph illustrations, Cornelius Medvei places us in a vivid world that is both familiar and alien. It's a world in which Mr. Thundermug and his family take up occupancy in an abandoned apartment building. On the roof of that building, Mr. Thundermug gazes at the heavens and thinks deep thoughts while his wife picks bugs off him and eats them. Understandably, he's somewhat confused by his complex existence as a fluent member of human society who has the essential nature of a more ancient species, but he assimilates as best he can. His worlds inevitably collide, and he is eventually brought to court for a petty crime and asked to defend himself in impossible ways.

Simultaneously playful and foreboding, Mr. Thundermug announces the arrival of a bold and imaginative talent.

Synopsis

Mr. Thundermug is the inventive, entertaining, and—against all odds—poignant story of an animal who acquires the ability to eloquently speak human language. Using his own beautiful, eerie lithograph illustrations, Cornelius Medvei places us in a vivid world that is both familiar and alien. It's a world in which Mr. Thundermug and his family take up occupancy in an abandoned apartment building. On the roof of that building, Mr. Thundermug gazes at the heavens and thinks deep thoughts while his wife picks bugs off him and eats them. Understandably, he's somewhat confused by his complex existence as a fluent member of human society who has the essential nature of a more ancient species, but he assimilates as best he can. His worlds inevitably collide, and he is eventually brought to court for a petty crime and asked to defend himself in impossible ways.

Simultaneously playful and foreboding, Mr. Thundermug announces the arrival of a bold and imaginative talent.

Publishers Weekly

This curious, slender debut-a "case history" complete with photographs-documents the appearance in a London-like city of Mr. Thundermug, a baboon who speaks perfect English, squats in a condemned apartment building with his wife and two children, and survives on foraged cockroaches and melon. The baboon's origins are unknown, but the unnamed narrator, a journalist, suggests that Mr. Thundermug may be linked to the mysteriously vanished zoologist, Dr. Alphonsus Rotz, whose immersion fieldwork with a baboon colony had led him to theorize, suggestively, about cross-breeding between humans and baboons. Mr. Thundermug is smart and articulate, but he can't read the eviction notices from the Housing Department. He sends his children to school and befriends their teacher, Miss Angela Young, who teaches him to read and write. After being harassed by the Housing Department, Mr. Thundermug is arrested for, among other things, cruelty to animals (his children sleep in the bathtub). He is vindicated, but his wife and children (none of whom can speak a human language) fare less well. Britisher Medvei offers a gently affecting and often funny allegory of the outsider, but his awkward framing of the "facts" gives the story a distance that diminishes its impact. (Apr.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Cornelius Medvei

Cornelius Medvei was born in 1977 and grew up in the east of England. He studied modern languages at Oxford University and worked in China for a year and a half as a teacher. He now lives in London. This is his first book.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

This curious, slender debut-a "case history" complete with photographs-documents the appearance in a London-like city of Mr. Thundermug, a baboon who speaks perfect English, squats in a condemned apartment building with his wife and two children, and survives on foraged cockroaches and melon. The baboon's origins are unknown, but the unnamed narrator, a journalist, suggests that Mr. Thundermug may be linked to the mysteriously vanished zoologist, Dr. Alphonsus Rotz, whose immersion fieldwork with a baboon colony had led him to theorize, suggestively, about cross-breeding between humans and baboons. Mr. Thundermug is smart and articulate, but he can't read the eviction notices from the Housing Department. He sends his children to school and befriends their teacher, Miss Angela Young, who teaches him to read and write. After being harassed by the Housing Department, Mr. Thundermug is arrested for, among other things, cruelty to animals (his children sleep in the bathtub). He is vindicated, but his wife and children (none of whom can speak a human language) fare less well. Britisher Medvei offers a gently affecting and often funny allegory of the outsider, but his awkward framing of the "facts" gives the story a distance that diminishes its impact. (Apr.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal

Adult/High School - Mr. Thundermug is a baboon-a baboon with the ability to convey his thoughts and feelings in flawless English. His quiet arrival, with his nonspeaking wife and children, in an unnamed Anglo-Asian city is at first unnoticed. Soon, however, the human inhabitants become aware of his presence and his implicit challenge to their beliefs about what is human and what is animal. Mr. Thundermug's social and legal problems slowly mount until he is arrested and brought to trial, where he pleads to be judged not as a human, or as an animal, but as an individual. The author writes in a detached, quasi-scientific style that underlines the inevitability of his hero's fate, while the black-and-white, slightly blurry lithographs that illustrate the story underscore Mr. Thundermug's anomalous status. Teens will appreciate the protagonist's desire to be treated as an individual and sympathize with his efforts to fit into a society whose conventions seem designed to exclude him. The provocative questions raised in this book make it a good choice for book discussion groups.-Sandy Schmitz, Berkeley Public Library, CA

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Kirkus Reviews

A talking primate takes up big-city living in Medvei's slight but winsome debut. Mr. Thundermug is, technically speaking, a baboon. He has a baboon wife and a pair of baboon children and a brick-red baboon behind. But he also has a house and a human girlfriend and a taste for the obituary section of the Evening News. Most curious of all, Mr. Thundermug has learned human speech. His ability to talk gets him into constant trouble: Quite clearly not a man, but something more than an average animal, Thundermug is caught between two worlds, which makes him an ideal straight man for the purposes of Medvei's satire. Thundermug gets sick and tries to go to the hospital but finds himself bounced between doctors and veterinarians. He takes a condemned house and clears it of cockroaches, only to learn that in order to stay he must send his offspring to school. Informed by the City Council that he must have a permit in order to keep monkeys at home (never mind that they're his children), the closest equivalent he's able to find is a dog license. Again and again, his attempts to blend into society are stymied by his human interlocutors' desire to define, distinguish, categorize and confine. That people can be close-minded, troubled by or blind to new distinctions is not a terribly novel observation, and as satire this novella is neither particularly original nor cutting. It charms, however, as a simple story, quietly but beautifully written. Thundermug himself comes off as a rich, fully developed fellow (despite being a talking baboon), and Medvei's descriptions of the unnamed city have a spare loveliness that lends his work the power of myth. No doubt the author wrote with a statement of sorts inmind, but readers will be best off just enjoying his tale. Wonderfully inventive and winningly modest.

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2007
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
112
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780061146121

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