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Wonderful World by Javier Calvo — book cover

Wonderful World

by Javier Calvo, Mara Faye Lethem
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Overview

A bravura performance by a groundbreaking new writer -- a novel set in Barcelona's Gothic Quarter made up of multiple storylines, including a fictional, unpublished manuscript by Stephen King.

Wonderful World is the story of a son trying to make his father proud -- by becoming an international criminal.

Barcelona: The Gothic Quarter. Fallen on his house's patio, Lucas Giraut maintains a conversation with his friend, Valentina Parini, an eccentric and compulsive reader of Stephen King novels. Fanny Giraut, Lucas's mother, a well-known dealer in antiques, maintains a distant relationship with her son. Lorenzo Giraut, patriarch of the family and founder of the his own large company, dies under mysterious circumstances. All of these characters and their various storylines are brought together masterfully in Javier Calvo's innovative novel, along with a hearty injection of scandalous behavior and dangerous crimes. Full of unforgettable characters and scenarios in which reality and fantasy entwine, WONDERFUL WORLD marks the English-language debut of one of the world's most exciting and talented young writers.

Synopsis

When Lucas Giraut inherits the family company from a father who never really cared enough to get to know him, it comes with a lot of unanswered questions...and an archenemy: Lucas's mother, Fanny. An ambitious and ruthless entrepreneur, Fanny believes her son is as useless as his father, whose recent, mysterious death delights her. Determined to understand exactly what he's been bequeathed, Lucas follows clues found in a windowless secret apartment—and in his dreams—deep in Barcelona's underworld and far from the comforts of his home, a former ducal palace. Meanwhile, Valentina Parini—a precocious and troubled seventh-grader and the self-proclaimed Top European Expert on the Work of Stephen King—looks to Lucas, her upstairs neighbor and only friend, as she struggles with growing up.

Javier Calvo's Wonderful World is a haunting tale that entwines reality and fantasy, filled with scandalous behavior and dangerous crimes.

Publishers Weekly

Calvo's first novel to appear in English is a frenetic and magnificent mashup of family drama, mob revenge story and surreal mystery featuring a gigantic enforcer obsessed with comic books, a 12-year-old girl fixated on Stephen King, a "namby-pamby" antiques dealer on a mad quest and a crime lord with a penchant for women's coats. Thirty years ago, Barcelona antiques dealer Lorenzo Girault was imprisoned for shady dealings. Now, his son, Lucas, insinuates himself into the seedy underworld to discover who was responsible for his father's ruin. While conspiring with Mr. Bocanegra, the crooked proprietor of a strip club, and Iris Gonzalvo, a failed actress, Lucas simultaneously combats his mother's efforts to usurp his share in the family business and watches after his disturbed young neighbor and only friend, Valentina Parini. Lucas's adventure is overlaid with a portentous "filial dream" and portions of a fictitious Stephen King novel that may hold clues to his father's fate, creating a rich and complex structure. The expansive cast can sometimes be difficult to sort out, but its quirks allow Calvo to set up a fast-moving narrative overflowing with hilarious situations. (Mar.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author, Javier Calvo

A screenwriter and a book collector, Javier Calvo is the author of four works of fiction. Wonderful World is his English-language debut. He divides his time between Barcelona and Brooklyn, New York.

Reviews

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Editorials

Booklist

"Surreal, sexy, wildly funny, self-indulgent, and wretchedly excessive . . . has all the earmarks of a cult favorite in the making."

Clive Barker

"Javier Calvo’s Wonderful World is a unique, visionary novel: verbally magical, funny, and full of old-fashioned sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll. This is the work of a marvelous literary talent."

Details

"Javier Calvo claims to have channeled the ghost of Charles Dickens to write thispostmodern thriller, and the young Spanish author tells his tale with enough brio—the cartoonish cast includes Pink Floyd-obsessed gansters and plastic-surgery-maimedmatriarchs—that you’ll excuse the presumption."

Publishers Weekly

Calvo's first novel to appear in English is a frenetic and magnificent mashup of family drama, mob revenge story and surreal mystery featuring a gigantic enforcer obsessed with comic books, a 12-year-old girl fixated on Stephen King, a "namby-pamby" antiques dealer on a mad quest and a crime lord with a penchant for women's coats. Thirty years ago, Barcelona antiques dealer Lorenzo Girault was imprisoned for shady dealings. Now, his son, Lucas, insinuates himself into the seedy underworld to discover who was responsible for his father's ruin. While conspiring with Mr. Bocanegra, the crooked proprietor of a strip club, and Iris Gonzalvo, a failed actress, Lucas simultaneously combats his mother's efforts to usurp his share in the family business and watches after his disturbed young neighbor and only friend, Valentina Parini. Lucas's adventure is overlaid with a portentous "filial dream" and portions of a fictitious Stephen King novel that may hold clues to his father's fate, creating a rich and complex structure. The expansive cast can sometimes be difficult to sort out, but its quirks allow Calvo to set up a fast-moving narrative overflowing with hilarious situations. (Mar.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Library Journal

Set in Barcelona, this crime page-turner features enigmatic antiques dealer Lucas Giraut, around whom spin two women: a teenage neighbor, the lonely and slightly unhinged Valentina Parini, and Lucas's mother, Fanny, with whom he has always had a stormy relationship. Lucas's obsession with discovering who betrayed his father leads him into the violent realm of organized crime; to call this world "wonderful" is, of course, ironic since it's only wonderful for the gangsters. The sprawling plot, centered on the attempted reproduction and sale of three forged Celtic panels, is advanced largely through the clumsy intervention of a plethora of unattractive characters, most of whom are defined by a single trait (e.g., one is a Rastafarian, another a Don Juan). The constant shifting of scenes pays homage to the cinema, and the narrative is threaded with numerous references to the mainstays of popular culture, especially the works of Stephen King; three of the four parts conclude with a chapter from King's apocryphal novel called, interestingly, Wonderful World. This is the first of Calvo's four works to be translated into English, capably done so by his wife. Despite its length, it is a fast-moving, entertaining read but has little staying power. For public libraries only.
—Lawrence Olszewski

Kirkus Reviews

Spanish author Calvo's second novel, the first to be published in English, is a sprawling tale of sex, drugs, art thieves and family rivalries in modern-day Barcelona. The heady mix of intellectual affairs and pop-culture absurdities, along with some questionable forays into metafiction, occasionally recalls David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest (1996). The plot loosely hangs on the moody frame of Lucas Giraut, an antiques dealer who's in bed with Bocanegra, the seedy partner of his late father, to make a killing on some stolen Celtic paintings. He's also doing battle with his mother, who's making a play for the stock that Lucas owns in her husband's firm; questioning the motivations of Bocanegra, who had a shady relationship with Giraut's father and a Russian art thief; and managing an awkward relationship with his neighbor Valentina, a pubescent girl who has an unhealthy enthusiasm for Stephen King's upcoming opus-which, incidentally, is also titled Wonderful World. Calvo's novel includes excerpts from that book, in which a strangely perfect-seeming New World Order inevitably gives way to global panic, and that's just one of many cultural references he tinkers with, from car ads to pop music (Bob Marley and Pink Floyd most prominently) to porn to X-Men comics to couture. But to what end? Calvo hints at apocalyptic themes throughout, and stray plot threads help give the story an end-of-days feel. But this novel about chaos is disconcertingly chaotic itself. The array of forgers, mobsters, cops, gallery owners and lawyers that Calvo introduces has verve, color and the occasional bit of bawdy humor, but little coherence. Irritatingly, that may be the intent: As the climax nears, Calvo riffson the insincerity of plot and characterization. A chase scene, for instance, has "the atmosphere typical of the conclusion of a story." It's a tactic straight out of the postmodern playbook, but it's no less a cop-out for that. A baffling, disappointing epic from an intriguing stylist.

Booklist (starred review)

“Surreal, sexy, wildly funny, self-indulgent, and wretchedly excessive . . . has all the earmarks of a cult favorite in the making.”

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2010
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
470
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780061557699

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