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A Perfect Night to Go to China
 
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A Perfect Night to Go to China [Hardcover]

David Gilmour
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Books in Canada

Ernest Hemingway spent some time in Toronto, before his legend took hold. David Gilmour’s sixth novel, A Perfect Night To Go To China, returns him there. The terse, retro-prose recalls the story “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” (“Last week he tried to commit suicide,” one waiter said) with snappy dialogue and anachronistically pugilistic behaviour from the tragic protagonist. This is a homage to Hemingway’s achingly beautiful, doomed classic, The Sun Also Rises (aka Fiesta), by way of Paul Auster’s New York Trilogy (that is, an urban mystery that is really an ontological thriller); indeed, there is a fiesta at the heart of this novel that one can’t quite return to, but must.
The novel is of course, its own beast too, and the inevitable extension of Gilmour’s sense of the inner-cinematic, his superb ear, unspooling in a Caribbean denouement that is, except for one false note, just ripe enough to break the reader’s heart.
On one level (and by no means the ground floor), this is a story about a misanthropic, handsome, well-paid television presenter, Roman, who steps out of his home into Chinatown for a fifteen minute drink in a little nearby bar, leaving the door unlocked (as Michael Moore tells us Torontonians do) while his young son Simon is sleeping. But as another Roman, the one also named Polanski, has foretold, “Chinatown” yields unbearable loss; the TV celebrity returns to discover his son gone. This first chapter, so light of foot, so slight of tone, is almost uncannily unbearable in its stylish juxtaposition of the unspeakable and the utterly insipid; it sets a level of achievement that the novel only regains in its lush, careening, exhilarating last three chapters. The middle section of the book can be read as a Purgatorio, where the poetry gives way to prose.
The narrative is stripped way down low, possibly as lo-fi as a novel can get before it succumbs to smoky spoken word in a dead-end bistro during a Montreal blizzard. The book’s power is in its absences-a missing child, a missing mother and wife (the Kafkaesquely named M. who leaves Roman early on) and ultimately, and more deeply, the missing father, who becomes a sort of self-cannibalising vanishing man.
Accompanied by a Chandleresque cop called Raymond (everything in this book mirrors noir, often in blank off-whites; even the title, which is converted from a black taxi driver’s expression “a perfect day to go to China”), Roman seeks his son, finds him only in dreams, and ultimately loses interest in anything else in life but his desire to be reunited with his self-made Beatrice. In this sense, the novel rises to converge in a florid Paradise. Roman resembles no one so much as the Milton of the sonnet who finds his dead beloved in his dreams, only to wake to light and find her fled. The book presents us with the sordid, bleary-eyed dailyness that’s part of the phenomenology of grief-that is, the kind of loss that transcends language and begins to invade things, inside and outside a person, with nullity.
Roman is an amalgam of several key existential figures, from Dostoyevsky’s man under the floorboards in Notes From Underground, full of bile and thought, to Sartre’s great nauseated one-the word nausea ends a chapter, and vomit plays a key role in the almost-ambiguous last chapter or so; in this way, the novel proceeds both as a very gripping, sometimes fun, yarn (including a bank heist, much witty acerbic banter, and punch-ups in fancy restaurants) and a bizarre project of owlish excavation-a rescuing of the fragments of Angst and Dread worth reclaiming for our own new century.
Gilmour’s playful, constantly resounding structuring is thematically masterful as well: having a TV presenter become addicted to opiates and hurl himself into his own dream world, wherein he rushes from reality (because of the supposed or real destruction of his son), suggests every theorist from Marx, Lacan to Baudrillard. But the real presiding spirit here is probably Foucault, who reminds us that the speaking subject creates fictions in order to respond to the void. Gilmour’s Roman, an interviewer who exists for the world mainly as a two-dimensional image in a beautiful suit, spins his tale for us, both to create a world that he can bear to live in, and ultimately, to enable his own transmission out of it.
In Chapter Six, Roman speaks of “sailing. . .out of my being.” The sea returns again in the concluding chapters that, had the repressed cop been absent, might have been flawless in terms of tone and suspense. One tastes the hot air of the tropical isle, one counts each whimsical sarcastic ending flourish-as if they are as animate as the Bogart-like, supremely heroic figure of stoic anguish that Roman becomes.
Transfixed painfully between Mourning and Melancholia, Gilmour’s dispossessed father figure perishes more in the noonday city than in the moonlit jungle, leaving the door ajar for multiple readings, and few happy endings. This seems one of the most refreshing, moving and supple works of fiction written since the 21st century began; it is lovely to see it achieve so much that is uniquely Canadian by handsomely converting great American and European works, without missing a beat. I’d go with this one, any day.
Todd Swift (Books in Canada)

Review

Gilmour's prose style is spare and darkly funny, jewelled with clever metaphors and precise details. It's enjoyably reminiscent of Raymond Chandler..."A Perfect Night to Go to China" is a compelling example of smart writing about trauma, and an uncomfortably pleasurable read. (Quill & Quire )

Gilmour's prose has flashes of bright metaphor, and his dialogue is alert and alive. (The New York Times )

...compulsively readable.... It takes a sharp focus to give us this much in such a brief book. A lesser writer would have given us a leaden brick.... The amazing thing is that it is both a sleek, fast read and a compulsively devastating personal tragedy. When the story is this affecting, the result is a luminous reading experience, the kind we all crave - the kind we sometimes find, if we're lucky, in our favourite authors. I don't think it's going too far to mention such names as Camus, Graham Greene, Elmore Leonard and even Calvino...they all have style, intelligence and strength. Gilmour is one of the best writers we have. His new novel is exactly the kind of thing I'd love to see more of in Canadian writing. It's elegantly written without wasting time on irrelevant detail. It is firmly plotted. It is paced for speed. Something actually happens. I'm saving this book to share with my son. You might want to remember this one come Father's Day. (Toronto Star )

..."A Perfect Night" is unlike anything Gilmour has written before, and all the better for it. (Maclean's )

David Gilmour has created a short, powerful book that is profoundly emotive. (Calgary Herald )

...one of the most refreshing, moving, and supple works of fiction written since the 21st century began... (Books in Canada )

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Literary tricks abound, but not much in the way of plot, Nov 15 2006
By 
Catherine Cerveny (Oshawa, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Perfect Night to Go to China (Hardcover)
This is an interesting "stream of consciousness" novel, told from the point of view of a father who's son has disappeared. The language is eloquent and there are some interesting observations made by a man who seems to have fallen out of sync with the rest of the world. The book ponders the question of now that he's lost his son, does the rest of the world matter anymore? All the things he once thought were important are meaningless now. However, in terms of actual story, plotting, interesting developments, resolution to the conflict, this novel is terrible and sadly lacking. The characters and settings aren't really developed. There's very little back-story or history to anyone. It's just random, depressing thoughts spinning around in the protagonist's head as he spirals down into depression and, I think, eventual insanity. This is not a thriller, suspense, or mystery story---which is what I expected I'd be reading when I picked up this book. If you want to read a novel about a father losing his grip on reality after the disappearance of a child, this book is for you. Otherwise, I'd skip it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Heartbreaking but Unbelievable, Jun 8 2008
By 
Teddy (Richmond, BC) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: A Perfect Night to Go to China (Hardcover)
The book opens with Roman tucking his 6-year-old son in for the night. He then decides to leave the house, with his son in it, to go to a bar down the street for a quick drink. He's gone about 15 minutes. When he returns, his son is missing.

Throughout the book we follow Roman on a remorseful journey. A journey of regret, sorrow, relationship problems, searching, and all those things that normally go with loss.

I really wanted to like this book and I did, I just didn't love it. David Gilmour really has a way with words, and this really shines through. His mature prose was sometimes poetic, sparkled with some dark humour.

The major problem I had with this book was that every time Roman would dream, they would be in sequence. It's like he planned it that way and he could do this at will. We don't dream that way. I sometimes wish we did, because I have had dreams that I wish would continue the next time that I fell asleep. LOL!

I think with Gilmour's talent, he could have done much more with this book. That said, this is the first David Gilmour book I have read, but I will definitely try another.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An intriguing read, April 27 2005
By 
This review is from: A Perfect Night to Go to China (Hardcover)
A Perfect Night to go to China was an interesting book that compelled me - because, as soon as I got into the first couple of pages, I thought, "Whoa." And curiosity sunk in.

Roman, the protagonist, makes the biggest mistake of his life one night. He leaves his little boy alone for fifteen minutes to stroll into a bar.

When he gets back, his son Simon is gone.

At this point, the reader can sense Roman's mental and physical descent. He becomes obsessed with finding his son, believing that his son is communicating with him. Whenever he sleeps, he slips into a world, seemingly of the dead. He sees his mother there and, even, Simon. At these times he visits Simon, holds him close, tells him he misses him.
Meanwhile, his wife doesn't want to see him, he gets fired from his job. His behaviour is strange and at times he does not seem all there.

I'll have to admit it was heart-breaking to read this book. You really get a sense of what it's like, losing a child. How it becomes the centre of your world. Everything seems trivial to that one big gap in your life. And what shocks Roman is that, at times, he momentarily forgets about Simon. For example, when he sees a menacing dog. He is surprised, shocked, maybe even a little disappointed in himself, that he could, even for a moment, forget about his son.

A Perfect Night to go to China was a clear and easy read. It isn't even 200 pages, and I found that I breezed through it. Gilmour's writing is accessible. I love the way he uses similes - you can always picture his images and he doesn't use obscure words like some authors do. His dialogue is also very striking.

The title still strikes me as a bit of a mystery - I can see why he named his title that, but I am just wondering, Why China?

All in all, A Perfect Night to go to China is recommended. I'd recommend it especially to parents who have suffered the loss of a child, although that isn't a requirement. I am only 17 years old and I found this book intriguing. It is different, and that's what makes it original.
This is some fine work.

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