THE DEATH OF BUNNY MUNRO
By Nick Cave
The Death of Bunny Munro is an action novel. This is so partly by
necessity; the protagonist (who has a father also named Bunny Munro, and a son,
Bunny Junior) "feels, but does not cogitate." Like his furry namesake,
or literary progenitor Rabbit Angstrom, Bunny is a self-confessed "vagina
man," a cocksman and all-around pussy-hound who can't keep it down. The
story is set in motion with the suicide of Bunny's long-suffering wife Libby,
leaving Bunny, a door-to-door salesman for a cosmetics company, to drag Bunny
Junior along with him on his priapic rounds, servicing a list of clients in the
Brighton area. What results is a downward spiral of drunken attempts (most of
them spectacularly unsuccessful) at debauchery.
But things do happen. They happen emphatically, with dialogue often
shouted, braced with obscenities, or given the now familiar double-barreled
punctuation: "?!" And they happen with flash and style, particularly
through Nick Cave's ability to imagine a seemingly endless supply of new verbs.
Bunny "trombones" his hand, trying to focus on his watch. Staggering
drunkenly, he "Tarzans" the curtains in a hotel room. Still drunk, a
room "dervishes" around him. A busty young lady "cleavages
forward." Bunny Junior watches a tall man "leporello" from his
car. Just for the act of closing a cellphone a wonderful short list can be made out, as
Bunny, in turn, "clamshells," "tongs," "castanets,"
"forceps," and "lobsters" the device.
Flash and style are Bunny's own distinctive traits, from his trademark
forelock to his regularly tenting animal-print briefs. As I began by noting,
there isn't much else to him. He seems not only without higher mental
functioning - being repeatedly likened to a zombie or automaton - but is a virtual a slave to
recurrent, unbidden, "goatish visions" of pussy. In particular,
celebrity pussy: "glittering and sleek and expensive." The imagined
vaginas of Kylie Minogue and Avril Lavigne (?!) are his wank material of
choice, but in a pinch any "random vagina" will do. Pussy is his
God(dess),
something he confesses to love beyond all things, beyond life itself, and he
frequently drops to his knees to worship it. Which isn't to say he's always
about to get some.
If all of this sounds like good, dirty fun, it is. It is not, however, the
sort of all-out assault on decency that one gets from a writer like Irvine Welsh
(who provides one of the blurbs on the dustjacket). There is, for one thing, a
rather cheesy
spirituality behind it all. Angels (in the form of Libby's ghost) and demons (in
the form of a serial killer in a devil costume and armed with a garden fork)
walk the stage, and the final chapters present a hokey and sentimental vision of
the afterlife. The play of leitmotifs - like the rhyming of Bunny's suggestive
bunny ears with the horns of the Horned Killer - and the thick sense of fate and
doom ("I am damned," are the novel's first words) promise a kind of Under
the Volcano for the MTV generation . . . if we keep in mind that the MTV
generation is now middle-aged. But Cave doesn't want to go that far. Instead of
going straight to hell Bunny even gets to enjoy a kind of redemption courtesy of
his feckless affection for Bunny Junior. Some things are still sacred, and
inevitable.
Notes:
Review first published online December 21, 2009.
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