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Restraint Of Beasts [Paperback]

Magnus Mills
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Jun 3 1999
The news couldn't be worse for Tam, Richie and their new supervisor: Mr McCrindle's fence has gone slack. The three of them are duly dispatched to the McCrindle farm, where they finish off the work, then go to England where, after rain-sodden days bashing in fence posts, they wolf down baked beans in their shared caravan and spend their evenings and cash in the local pub. But then they encounter the Hall Brothers – butchers, rival fencers and local heroes…

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Product Description

From Amazon

Good fences may make good neighbors, but in Magnus Mills's first novel, bad fences make for high tension indeed. An eerie noir fable told in a grim, deadpan voice, The Restraint of Beasts begins as an unnamed English fence builder finds himself promoted to foreman over Tam and Richie, two undermotivated Scots laborers. They've just been sent out to fix a high-tension fence when events go horribly awry--and that's just the beginning. For the rest of the novel, as his charges drink, smoke, loaf, and pound the occasional post, things go wrong over and over again. In a sense, that's all you can truly rely on in Mills's fictional world. It is not giving away too much to say that with these particular fencers on the job, you'd best watch your back. And your front, for that matter. And maybe keep a firm eye on the skies, just in case.

The team travels south to England, where they live out of a damp, cold caravan in the town of Upper Bowland. They're soon at loggerheads with the sinister Hall brothers, whose business enterprises seem to combine fencing, butchering, sausage-making, and a fierce attachment to school meals. "We committed no end of good deeds!" cries John Hall. "Yet still we lost the school dinners! Always the authorities laying down some new requirement, one thing after another! This time is seems we must provide more living space. Very well! If that's the way they want it, we'll go on building fences for ever if necessary! We'll build pens and compounds and enclosures! And we'll make sure we never lose them again!"

In between placing Kafkaesque obstacles in his narrator's path, Mills seeds his debut with small, darkly comic touches: Tam's father, whom we last see erecting a stockade round his house "to stop you from coming home any more"; the sound of Richie's Black Sabbath tapes "slowly being stretched in an under-powered cassette player"; the caravan's encroaching squalor; An Early Bath for Thompson, the book that Richie tries without success to read. No doubt about it, The Restraint of Beasts is a strange novel that only grows stranger as it progresses; with luck, it augurs more brilliant, odd work from Mills. --Mary Park --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Good fences make bad labors in this mordant satire of tensions among the rural British working classes from Mills, a former London bus driver. The trouble begins in Scotland when Tam Finlayson, Richie Campbell and their unnamed English foreman (who narrates the novel) must rebuild a slack fence before leaving for a more extensive job in England. Their on-site supervisor hovers over them nervously until Tam accidentally kills him by releasing a tension wire at the wrong moment. The workers bury the body, hoping his absence will not be missed. Soon after beginning work in England, Richie kills their new supervisor with a clumsily thrown post. The next assignment, involving seven-foot-high electric fences intended for "the restraint of beasts," yields yet another accidental death and coverup. Mills's narrator describes these horrific events in an hilariously controlled and pervasive deadpan. As bodies accumulate and vanish without comment from police or other authorities, the novel moves toward a disturbing?if predictable?conclusion. Mills's satire occasionally loses its edge when he describes the technicalities of fence-building (a conceit he leans on heavily) and spends an awfully long time lending his sharp ears to dreary sessions in village pubs. Yet between the dull stretches, the clash between power-hungry bureaucrats and alcoholic, downtrodden laborers finds haunting, comic expression in this promising debut.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply hysterical Mar 18 2002
Format:Paperback
The writing is completely simple and understated, and the plot is minimal, but this book was absolutely hysterical. It's an easy, really fun read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A standout for the characters and humor Feb 1 2002
By K. Corn
Format:Paperback
I absolutely loved this well-written glimpse into the life of 3 fence builders and their adventures in Scotland and England.I was laughing throughout this book, but readers should be forewarned that the humor isn't for everyone (it is a very dry humor, even a black humor) and the plot, such as it is, tends to ramble, meander and go in anything but a straightforward direction. Still, I couldn't put it down, riveted by the lives of these three men, the various crises that came up and their way of bumbling through each day as best they could. It was obvious that the author know about the life described here.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Left empty by the ending Nov 30 2001
Format:Paperback
I loved All Quiet on the Orient Express by Mills but I must say I was disappointed by Restraint of Beasts. The characters were good but the ending was abrupt and without closure. I was even wondering whether the last pages were missing (unfortunately, no). It is a quick read so I don't feel it was a waste. Take from it what you can and then pick up All Quiet on the Orient Express.
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Most recent customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Darkly Comic Debut
Magnus Mills, bus driver and first time novelist, has created a darkly humorous portrait of blue-collar work in Britain with Restraint of Beasts. Read more
Published on Oct 29 2001 by Chris MB
5.0 out of 5 stars A droll, black humored masterpiece
Ever find yourself trapped in a job that, for whatever reasons, you can't leave? Eventually you find a way to rationalize and deal with things that would normally repulse you or... Read more
Published on Aug 11 2001 by J. Godek
2.0 out of 5 stars The Restraint of Readers
This is a story of three men who built high-tension fences for the restraint of beasts but found themselves under the restraint in the end. Read more
Published on July 17 2001 by Andrew Karbovsky
4.0 out of 5 stars Fence Posts...
The matter of fact absurdity of life looms large in this novel. Life is a ludicrous experience, of course! Especially when you're a fencer stuck in a caravan in Scotland. Read more
Published on Feb 7 2001 by "tinym"
4.0 out of 5 stars strangely compelling
I can't say what attracted me to this book. Having read it, I can't quite put my finger on why I found it such a pleasure. Read more
Published on Dec 21 2000
4.0 out of 5 stars Work and emptiness
This simple, straight and gloomy book is a punch on the nose. It clearly blows down our faith in the post-Industrial Revolution rethoric that tells us that being a paid worker is... Read more
Published on July 10 2000 by "fchiossi"
4.0 out of 5 stars What, Me Worry?
Too bad it is so hard to find novels like this one. Bitingly funny for the right reader, the tale is a simple story with subtle complexity and room for thought. Read more
Published on May 20 2000 by james baker
5.0 out of 5 stars Recommended by Penelope Fitzgerald
Penelope Fitzgerald, one of my all time favorite writers, liststhis as one of her 5 favorite books. So it must be good --
Published on May 17 2000 by Readersguide
4.0 out of 5 stars Mad Cows and Scotsmen?
Having worked in a business that did installations (carpeting in this case), I certainly recognized the characterizations of Tam and Richie. Read more
Published on Jan 20 2000
4.0 out of 5 stars Hynotically compelling
I have a weakness for dark comedies about average people just trying to get from day to day while retaining grasp of their pride and sanity, and this book fits into the surreal end... Read more
Published on Dec 28 1999 by F. Jasmine
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