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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Theroux's style can be daunting, but try it!, March 31, 2000
This review is from: Three Wogs: A Novel (Paperback)
Theroux's viciously pedantic prose brings these wogs (derogatory term for non-whites living in British lands) to life in vivid, devious tones. Three Wogs is a great introduction to Theroux's longer work. Lighter, of course shorter, than the masterpiece "D'Arconville's Cat", it is no less engaging and perfect for those of us who demand resolution in 200 pages. Theroux's style can be daunting, but try it! If you are enamored with the challenge of verbal expression, you will be inspired by his efforts.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wogs Blog, January 26, 2008
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This review is from: Three Wogs: A Novel (Paperback)
Very funny early Theroux. There are three separate stories about the interaction of non-white British with "native" British. Both sets of characters are larger than life stereotypes that will remind you of people you know (I may even be related to some of them).

The enjoyment of the book is in Theroux's resolution of the conflicts he sets up. This is an entertaining quick read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Theroux's command of language is spectacular., September 6, 2005
This review is from: Three Wogs: A Novel (Paperback)
The novel is funny and wonderful, and Theroux's writing is masterful. Well worth the 200 pages.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Prose Style, April 22, 2004
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This review is from: Three Wogs (Hardcover)
This is early Theroux. He is probably at his best here. This book is timeless and seems like it was wriiten in a different age, not the 1970s. Just the sentences alone are beautiful to read.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "It all goes back to Cain, doesn't it?", September 18, 2008
This review is from: Three Wogs: A Novel (Paperback)
The few reviews of Theroux's début, three novellas around the central theme of caricatured English people's exaggerated prejudice against, in turn, an equally cartoonish yet more sympathetically delineated Chinese, Indian, and African immigrant, have been positive, yet this trilogy needs more than the two sentences the previous readers have given it to account for its charm. Written in London during his ex-pat period (as with his brother Paul), Theroux's a convoluted stylist in these period pieces.

Compared to LW, and his other novels "Darconville's Cat" and "An Adultery," Theroux already has achieved at the start the qualities of his mature prose: a delight in insults, trivia, and dialogue; ideas spinning about wildly half in the indirect first-person ravings of his protagonists, half through a coolly omniscient, mocking, deflating voice; a distrust of systems, leaders, and cant; a healthy skepticism for the collective rather than the eccentric holdout; a sympathy for the compassionate, spiritual, and sensitive trampled by our modern cruelties.

As I recently finished his massive novel "Laura Warholic," (also reviewed by me here), returning to his first fiction published thirty-seven years before shows that for a young writer-- he was barely into his thirties when he finished TW-- I marvel how he'd already managed to cloak himself in the mantle of such eminent men of letters as Robert Burton, Rabelais, Sterne, Georges Perec, Joyce, and Cervantes. There's little patience among lazy readers today, as Theroux has lamented, for such vastly learned, baffingly stocked, and endlessly witty, cleverly cruel, and downright funny satire as he favors. By his intelligence, as with his predecessors, he may be doomed to a few discerning aesthetes, but better this than the best-selling rabble. Still, I do hope he's rewarded soon with his genius grant.

Aphoristic, barbed, and entertaining: he combines mock-heroic lists, waspish social commentary, theological minutiae, and cultural takes that upend Orientalism in a manner much more engrossing than some post-colonial critic's monograph. I wonder how many disciples of Edward Said have overcome their revulsion at this collection's title and actually studied this triptych? They'd learn a lot from Theroux's insights.

You do have to put up with Dickensian names, and Pynchonesque earnestness. To me, this remains a slight distraction that interferes a bit with my total immersion. I like his outrageousness, but it can be slightly wearing by its repetition. His books are best enjoyed a few pages at a time, so you can savor and re-read passages, but his plots, rambling as they are, by their carefully staged climaxes can prove unputdownable. Theroux always likes to exaggerate; no wonder he likes the 19c political cartoonist Thomas Nast. His send-ups of how Westerners hear foreigners mangle English appear double-edged: they manage to show up our own prejudices as well as make us smile with the garbled pronunciations and syntactical contortions. A PC-addled academic may frown, but the rest of us will probably chuckle often at both the migrant and the settled, as they contend for the dubiously honorific title of British subject.

Yunnum Fun, in the first story, "Miss Proby gets hers," carries out an act of cunning revenge against the aghast bluehaired snoop who hates him. Fun's driven to act out of being driven nearly mad by the miss. Here's a typical observation: "The urge for Chinese food is always unpredictable: famous for no occasion, standard fare for no holiday, and the constant as to demand is either whim, the needy plebescite of instantly famished drunks, or pregnancy. Any supply-demand ratio, borne of such flux, can do nothing but annoy and create, even in the genetically silent, a hysteria etched in and bordered by a quietude that could only be termed pathological." (27)

Elsewhere, this aside shows Theroux's clever truth in the smallest detail: Miss P. takes into the movies "the sweet narcotic of three Cadbury's Fruit-and-Nut bars, the innutritious artillery of the easily appeased." (46) While there's a few passages that he fumbles, these prove rare. Theroux labors to avoid cliché and his invention can be forgiven its rare missteps in pursuit of originality, an achievement rare for today's writers so far along in the well-trodden course of English prose.

The second tale, "Childe Roland," takes nothing I can see from Robert Browning's poem, but in its encounter between disaffected lout Roland McGuffey and first a hapless seller of ice cream and then Dilip, a refugee from India whom Roland meets in a train station where the Englishman lazily pretends to work, there's poignancy.
Theroux excels in descriptions, too long to excerpt, that reveal partitioned India, its streets and sounds and textures, marvelously, compared with dreary London.

Finally, in a tale more eccentrically English in the way of Saki on opium, or Wodehouse gone on a bender, "The Wife of God" turns to the clerical fussiness of domesticated rigidity that's upended when Cyril, choirmaster despised and courted alternately by the improbably named Rev. Which Therefore, asks for pre-marital counsel before he weds another African emigré, his ballerina love. This story's more in the tradition of Baron Corvo or Belloc, if they were chemically deranged, perhaps.

So, there's three stories that a few readers who find this review may find rewarding. An acquired taste, but for some, a delectable one. As all of Theroux's fiction except LW languish out of print, his books may take some tracking down, but the chase will end in pleasure, moral instruction, richly ornamented periodic sentences, and a need to go to your OED.
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Three Wogs: A Novel
Three Wogs: A Novel by Alexander Theroux (Paperback - January 15, 1997)
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