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Overview
During one month in the autumn of election year 2000, scores of movie-business strivers are focused on one goal: getting a piece of an elusive, but surely huge, television saga, the one that opens with Huns sweeping through Mongolia and closes with a Mormon diviner in the Las Vegas desert; the sure-to-please-everyone multigenerational TV miniseries about diviners, those miracle workers who bring water to perpetually thirsty (and hungry and love-starved) humankind. Among the wannabes: Vanessa Meandro, hot-tempered head of Means of Production, an indie film company; her harried and varied staff; a Sikh cab driver, promoted to the office of -theory and practice of TV; a bipolar bicycle messenger, who makes a fateful mis-delivery; two celebrity publicists, the Vanderbilt girls; a thriller writer who gives Botox parties; the daughter of an L.A. big-shot, who is hired to fetch Vanessa+s Krispy Kremes and more; a word man who coined the phrase—inspired by a true story; and a supreme court justice who wants to write the script.A few true artists surface in the course of Moody+s rollicking but intricately woven novel, and real emotion eventually blossoms for most of Vanessa's staff at Means of Production, even herself. THE DIVINERS is a cautionary tale about pointless ambition; a richly detailed look at the interlocking worlds of money, politics, addiction, sex, work, and family in modern America; and a masterpiece of comedy that will bring Rick Moody to a still higher level of appreciation.
Synopsis
During one month in the autumn of election year 2000, scores of movie-business strivers are focused on one goal: getting a piece of an elusive, but surely huge, television saga, the one that opens with Huns sweeping through Mongolia and closes with a Mormon diviner in the Las Vegas desert; the sure-to-please-everyone multigenerational TV miniseries about diviners, those miracle workers who bring water to perpetually thirsty (and hungry and love-starved) humankind. Among the wannabes: Vanessa Meandro, hot-tempered head of Means of Production, an indie film company; her harried and varied staff; a Sikh cab driver, promoted to the office of -theory and practice of TV; a bipolar bicycle messenger, who makes a fateful mis-delivery; two celebrity publicists, the Vanderbilt girls; a thriller writer who gives Botox parties; the daughter of an L.A. big-shot, who is hired to fetch Vanessa+s Krispy Kremes and more; a word man who coined the phraseinspired by a true story; and a supreme court justice who wants to write the script.A few true artists surface in the course of Moody+s rollicking but intricately woven novel, and real emotion eventually blossoms for most of Vanessa's staff at Means of Production, even herself. THE DIVINERS is a cautionary tale about pointless ambition; a richly detailed look at the interlocking worlds of money, politics, addiction, sex, work, and family in modern America; and a masterpiece of comedy that will bring Rick Moody to a still higher level of appreciation.
The New York Times Book Review - Stephen Metcalf
Rick Moody is an exhausting writer, and his prose is virtually impossible to meet halfway. And yet he writes with a firm conviction that Americans have served up to themselves the worst of all possible worlds, a condition well captured by the manic glad-handing of the entertainment industry. In Moody's America, no one possesses either inner resources or a sense of tribal belonging. The more outer-directed we have become, the more impersonal…Moody's writing style is perverse, but its intent is to force this gruesome paradox back on his audience.
Editorials
The New Yorker
Moody’s latest novel revolves around a proposed mini-series epic that follows generations of a tribe of diviners, from the conquests of the Mongols to the founding of Las Vegas. Unbeknown to the agents and studio executives scrambling for the rights, there’s no script, only a synopsis concocted by an office assistant and her lover, a married action-movie star. Meanwhile, a producer’s aging alcoholic mother disappears; an accountant embezzles thousands of dollars and goes on the lam; and a schizophrenic bike messenger is falsely accused of attempted murder. Moody’s kinetic prose calls to mind Bruce Wagner’s kaleidoscopic Hollywood novels, but it lacks Wagner’s acerbity and airy humor. One major riff concerns a popular television show about a community of werewolves (and involves a wearisome recounting of camera angles). Moody’s novel, like the high-production-value shows it refers to, has an earnest sententiousness that overshadows its well-crafted fluency.Stephen Metcalf
Rick Moody is an exhausting writer, and his prose is virtually impossible to meet halfway. And yet he writes with a firm conviction that Americans have served up to themselves the worst of all possible worlds, a condition well captured by the manic glad-handing of the entertainment industry. In Moody's America, no one possesses either inner resources or a sense of tribal belonging. The more outer-directed we have become, the more impersonal…Moody's writing style is perverse, but its intent is to force this gruesome paradox back on his audience.— The New York Times Book Review