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Port Mungo Hardcover – June 1, 2004

4.0 out of 5 stars 25 ratings

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Patrick McGrath is a writer of astonishing accomplishment: “fiction of a depth and power we hardly hope to encounter anymore,” according to Tobias Wolff, with “the drive and suspense of the most shameless thriller [and] the inevitability of myth.”

Port Mungo, his sixth novel, is a harrowing story of art and love, and of a family cursed by both. Throughout a privileged, eccentric childhood, Jack Rathbone enjoyed the constant adoration of his sister, Gin. So at art school in London, she is pained to see him fall under the spell of Vera Savage, a spectacularly bohemian painter with whom he soon runs off to New York City. From a bruised, bereft distance, Gin follows their southward progress through Miami and prerevolutionary Havana to Port Mungo, a seedy river town in the mangrove swamps along the Gulf of Honduras. Here Jack discovers himself as an artist, and begins to work with a fervor as intense as the restless, boozy waywardness to which Vera gradually succumbs, and which not even the births of two daughters can help to subdue.

Patrick McGrath’s mesmerizing narrative tracks these lives from the fifties in England to the nineties in Manhattan: the latter-day Gauguin; his buccaneering mate; the girls, Peg and Anna, left adrift in their wake; and Gin herself, their painstaking chronicler, whose house in Greenwich Village eventually becomes a haven for them all.

This feverish world of tropical impulses, artistic ambition, and love both reckless and enduring leads the Rathbones, ultimately, to a death swathed in mystery, and to another similarly bound in complicit secrecy, as the imperatives of passion, narcissism, and creativity hold each of them—and the reader—in relentless thrall.
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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

McGrath's latest yarn is set in Honduras and New York City in the 1980s and 1990s and revolves around the destructive relationship of two painters. Gin Rathbone watches in distress as her 17-year-old brother, Jack, falls for vibrant Vera Savage when she gives a lecture on art at their school. In seven weeks, Jack has abandoned his doting older sister and run off with Vera, first to New York, then to Port Mungo, where the pair have two children, Peg and Anna. Vera's infidelities plague their relationship, and after the death of Peg at 16 in mysterious circumstances, Jack eventually leaves Port Mungo for New York, where Gin is living. Gin and Jack's older brother, Gerald, take custody of Anna, citing Jack and Vera's irresponsibility, but 20 years later Anna returns, seeking the truth about her sister's death and her parents' characters. Told from Gin's decidedly slanted point of view, the novel unfolds in flashbacks that can sometimes be confusing. That Gin doesn't know as much as she thinks she does will be no surprise to the reader, but watching the tragedy of the Rathbones laid bare makes for exciting reading, and although McGrath's gothic airs work better in historical settings, he succeeds in creating a convincingly twisted family here. He is a highly esteemed writer, so expect demand.

Kristine Huntley
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"The kind of book that plants a seed in your mind that will germinate days or weeks later . . . A mesmerizing tropical tale with unforgettable characters, and an intriguing new direction for this supremely talented novelist." --Andrew O'Hehir, Salon.com

"Engrossing . . . Nuanced . . .
Port Mungo offers a portrait of the artist hero that shifts like a hologram [and displays] a restless, mischief-seeking intelligence." --Kai Maristed, Los Angeles Times Book Review

"Port Mungo is luridly fascinating and claustrophobic, a Grand Guignol pageant of cosmic passion, obsessive reflectivity and reprisal. McGrath's control over vocabulary and tone falter not a whit, and his exploration of the twinned impulses of creativity and despair, genius and moral bankruptcy is riveting." --Fredric Koeppel,
Memphis Commercial Appeal

"Suffused as it is by the glare of the tropics, [
Port Mungo's] narrative voice is the equivalent of darkness. Figures emerge from it and then subside back into it. In between they act, and such is the character of that darkness that one knows how only later, by virtue of the wounds they leave behind."--Peter Trachtenberg, Bookforum

"Astoundingly good . . . The outstanding feature of McGrath's storytelling is his ability to write with tranquil, evocative beauty about the vilest of subjects.
Port Mungo is haunting not because of any trickery of reversed expectation or suspended belief, but because we see so completely how damaging the most basic human emotions can be." --Elaina Richardson, O Magazine

"A compelling read." --
Seattle Times

“Sophisticatedly jaded . . . immensely clever and tautly composed . . . [A] sinister, shifting web of family unrest and intrigue [and a] meditation on the shadowy wellsprings of art and love. [Port Mungo is] more artfully contrived than Patrick McGrath's previous work, and more intricately bound up with the larger issues [of] artistic truth and psychological truth." –Christopher Benfey, New York Times Book Review

“[Patrick McGrath’s] superb and unwholesome new novel [is] about the brutal impulses available to anyone, especially artists, who would let slip the loose restraints of civilization . . . There is no end of mysteries . . . In his shimmering way, McGrath pulls back the curtain on a terrible one and says, ‘Look!’ When he brings you to that place so adroitly, who can say no?” –Richard Lacayo, Time

"Port Mungo, [Patrick McGrath's] sixth novel, might best be described as the story of a love triangle: between Jack Rathbone, a self-absorbed English painter; his lover, the flamboyantly reckless Vera Savage; and his adoring sister, Gin Rathbone, who narrates Jack's odyssey through obsession, loss, and grief . . . There are hints of Joseph Conrad in Gin's account of her brother's slow, sun-drenched descent into a state of primal impulses, [sustained by] the sheer force of McGrath's elliptical prose, through his superbly atmospheric evocations of place and mood, and through his proven ability to surprise and horrify readers."--Angel Gurria-Quintana, Financial Times

"Port Mungo is about the spiritual struggle to bring art into being, and how that struggle becomes harder over time . . . [McGrath] evokes the wild abandon of [his hero's] art in carefully measured sentences of clipped precision and articulate control." --Alfred Hickling, The Guardian

"Skillful and entertaining . . . An appalled account of an artist's life, tallying the damage he perpetrates to those around him in the task to make." --David Flusfeder,
The Daily Telegraph

"Exciting . . . [McGrath] is a highly esteemed writer [who] succeeds in creating a convincingly twisted family here."--Kristine Huntley, Booklist

"A story of delicacy and not a little humor. The result is that literary rarity: a page-turner of real intelligence, [with] the sort of setting that even Graham Greene might have found too seedy for fiction [and] a finale that is as poignant as it is heart-stopping. A master story-teller has done it again." --David Robson,
Sunday Telegraph

"
Port Mungo is a tale of death and incest in the mangrove swamps off the Gulf of Honduras [where Jack Rathbone and Vera Savage] set up home, have two daughters, and fight, drink, cheat, sweat, have sex, paint, and psychologically torture each other, often before breakfast."--Tim Adams, The Observer (London)

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ June 1, 2004
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ First Edition
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1400041651
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1400041657
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.18 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.54 x 0.92 x 9.49 inches
  • Best Sellers Rank: #7,307,403 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 out of 5 stars 25 ratings

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Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
25 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2015
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    I personally like this author, so the book was pretty good,yet not as good as his other books
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2013
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Love Patrick McGrath. He's a fine writer and weaves compelling stories. Always engrossing and interesting.
    Will work my way through his oeuvre.
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 9, 2020
    Format: Paperback
    NO SPOILERS HERE!!
    PORT MUNGO by PATRICK McGRATH is a compelling portrait of 1960s NYC Art scene and its impoverished aftermath by a narrator made unreliable by love. In this case, it's the love of a sister for her painter brother, uncomprehending of nuance in Art and it's commerce, and the specific paintings themselves. A bit Burnt Orange, Heresy, A bit Under the Volcano, A bit much worse for looking into the horrible harms caused by moral blindness, always with McGrath's horrors lurking in every disturbed mind.
    This novel is still on my mind several years after I read it. It would be worth another read! Not considered one of McGrath's "best" though I don't know why. It works for me and pays off in a myriad of horrible ways.
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2016
    Format: Paperback
    A friend gave me Port Mungo, saying “it's all about character.” She knows I value character over plot in a book. Of course, it's always best to have some of both. And it is all about character -- or at least, it's both character and prose.

    There is a plot, and it's important to the novel, especially to the ending, but you could relate it in just a few paragraphs. And it's so scrambled that you need to figure it out after you've finished the book -- if you care enough to bother. This is the kind of book that book clubs are useful for: the group can piece together what happened better than an individual reader.

    I do like character-based novels but I need to feel something for the characters. I didn't like or care about these, none of the five: husband, wife, two daughters, and the husband's sister. That's quite a feat for the author, because I nearly always like at least the protagonist, even if he or she is hugely flawed. And it's not that they were too evil for me, even the 2 protagonists. I just couldn't relate to either of them. They weren't portrayed sympathetically, probably intentionally.

    When I'd almost finished the book, I looked up Patrick McGrath’s novels on Goodreads and discovered they're considered to be ‘gothic’. I might have read this one differently if I'd known that. I might have expected what the author delivered. The gothic nature wasn't clear to me until the very end. What is clear is that I don't like dark creepy novels.

    The most creepy thing about this story is that it's about a man, Jack, but narrated by his sister Gin. No sister should know her brother as intimately as Gin knows Jack. There are nods to ‘as Jack told me later,’ but they aren't enough to explain the knowledge Gin has. And Jack should not have related all that to his sister, if he did. Gin as herself is hardly portrayed; she is all about her relationship to Jack.

    The book reminded me a lot of Sarah Waters’ books, at least The Little Stranger and The Paying Guests. Waters’ books have more plot but they're similar in gradually revealing the twisted nature of the protagonists, similar in throwing out clues along the way to the characters and the story's outcome, even as the basic plot continues linearly. I'm already planning to recommend this to a friend who likes Waters’ books.

    But I did love the writing, and for that reason alone I'm glad to have read Port Mungo. The author has an incredible ability to convey a thought or an atmosphere vividly and in few words. I wanted to highlight sentences and paragraphs all the way through. In terms of turns of phase, it's one of the best books I've read. It's a pity McGrath doesn't write my kind of novel, because I'd love to read more of his prose.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2004
    Format: Hardcover
    Patrick McGrath is a master of the gothic novel. One of the main characters in this novel is that of Vera who is an adultress and a drunkard as well. She is married to Jack, a virtuous artist. Port Mungo is a novel about child abuse, drunkeness, adultery, incest and drug addiction. As with any great gothic novel, Port Mungo revels in its sheer creepiness and may well be the best new gothic of the year.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2015
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    This novel is very dated. Frankly, I didn't get far enough into it to know what it was about, because it annoyed me. I gave my copy to my district library.
  • Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2004
    Format: Hardcover
    Patrick McGrath finds genetic seeds for characters who border on the edge of maladaptation or evil or amorality. PORT MUNGO follows the line of his successful THE ASYLUM, DR. HAGGARD'S DISEASE, MARTHA PEAKE, and SPIDER, and despite the fact that he can be considered the progenitor for unlikable characters, he explores the psyches of these odd creatures with such skill that their darker sides often mesmerize us.

    Jack Rathbone is a 17-year-old youth in the UK who aspires to be an artist and lives with his sister Gin (the narrator of the story) who is devoted to her younger brother in a near pathologic manner. Jack encounters Vera Savage, an exotic bohemian painter from Scotland who is well shown in the UK, and falls under the spell of his older chanteuse/alcoholic/free love personage. The two become entwined as sexual partners and Jack encourages Vera to move to New York where they will open an 'American Studio' in the wildness of a new country and Jack will learn painting (and other lessons) from Vera.

    Once in Manhattan their painting is delayed by Vera's insatiable need to be the center of attention among new artsy acquaintances and her alcoholism triggers periods of absence. Feeling confined by New York the two decide to seek other locations to pursue their art, and after a brief stay in Havana, Cuba they find the perfect isolation in Port Mungo - a seedy, smarmy, decadent Maughamesque spot in the Gulf of Honduras. There they paint, drink, carouse, and while Jack develops a painting style of 'tropicalism', Vera begins to follow her sexual needs in adventures away from Port Mungo. Always reuniting after these trysts and fights, they eventually have a daughter Peg and some years later another daughter Anna. Vera soon deserts her family, leaving Jack (and on occasion his sister Gin) to raise the girls. Peg is more in the mold of her mother and is worshipped by Jack, but Peg dies in a quasi-mysterious fashion plunging Jack into a deep depression.

    Jack returns to New York to live with his sister Gin, and scathing rumors result in daughter Anna being adopted by her uncle who sees Jack as an inadequate parent. Time passes until Anna returns as a young woman to re-enter Jack's life - older, wiser, and needy. From this point on the story passes rapidly, enriched by characters who all deftly interplay with the strange history of what really happened in Port Mungo. Vera's absence is explained, Peg's death is clarified, and the true nature of each of these fascinating characters is painted before our eyes.

    McGrath leaves no one free of fault, of the ability to have a dark side, or to demonstrate that their chameleon lives can shed a dermis to reveal the core animal beneath. He writes so well that once the story is started it is difficult to put aside, so wary are we of the tension always mounting. He understands art and the artistic mind and has depicted the artist/model relationship as well as anyone writing today. You may not like the characters in this book, but they will remain indelibly stamped on your mind. Here is another fine work by one of our better novelists writing today.
    5 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Mrs AG
    4.0 out of 5 stars A good read
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 15, 2014
    Phew! An intense and gothic novel of twisted passions, all acted out within the claustrophobic confines of that most artistically fecund of contexts - the family. Not the very best novel I've ever read, but a good and compulsive read, and well written, and my first McGrath.
    The narrator is herself well under the spell of the main character, her toxically egotistical artist-brother Jack, and it's not long before the reader smells a rat in the way she continually re-calibrates her interpretations of what she sees and hears about him. Jack's long time mistress Vera is just too conveniently available as a scapegoat. 
    Without regurgitating the plot and giving away the ending, I found the characters sufficiently well-described and believable to engage me, as was the sense of place in descriptions of the Caribbean and of New York city as backdrops to the events. Interesting that some reviewers on this site have criticised both these aspects of the book, one even finding the denouement "laughable". Ah well, proof that reader response is as variable as individual temperament and life-experience, and sometimes our reactions are suspicious in themselves. Perhaps some find the messiness of human emotional life - its desires, and the rationalisations of those desires along with wilful ignorance of our real motivations - too uncomfortable to reflect upon for long. When I read that the author's father was superintendent at Broadmoor Hospital for the criminally insane I wondered if this goes some way to explaining McGrath's compulsion to dig so deeply not just into pathological behaviour but into the lengths those associated with such behaviour - witnesses and perpetrators alike - will go to protect themselves from acknowledging how implicated they are in the ensuing situations. It is sobering to admit our own complicity in the part we may have played in creating monsters such as (look away now - this IS a bit of a spoiler...) Jack Rathbone. It's a theme that seems to me eminently suitable for exploring via the medium of the novel.
  • Liam
    1.0 out of 5 stars Pseudo intellectual fodder
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 28, 2007
    I hesitated about filing a review as I only made it half way through this book. However, I wish I had read something other than glowing reviews before purchasing it. I found the characters depressing and the narrative rambling. Thinking back to some of the overtly positive reviews I've read I can't help but think of The Emperors New Clothes.