Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Skippy Dies


Read from Thursday, December 16th to to Monday, January 9th, 2012

Skippy Dies, by Paul Murray.  I read this book mostly by Kindle on the treadmill.  It is a tragicomedy about an Irish prep school, Seabrook.  Shortlisted for many awards, it is a recent novel that deals with a lot of current events, but feels timeless.  It took me awhile to get into the flow of the book, but once I did, I really enjoyed it.  The protagonist is Skippy, AKA Daniel Juster, who dies in a donut eating contest in the opening pages.  The rest of the long novel deals with events leading up to the event, and then the aftermath.

Skippy is a shy, awkward 14 year old boy.  His mom is sick, and there is a tension with his father.  He is on the swim team, but also takes pills to ease the stress of life.  But he falls for a girl in the neighboring school, Lori, the frisbee girl.  Skippy's best friend and roommate, Ruprecht, is a complete nerd, and obsessed with astrophysics and string theory.  He believes he can open the portal to another dimension, and almost thinks that he does at one point.  There are other boys, all obsessed with sex, girls, making fun of teachers, and pills and booze.  Murray does a great job of capturing the obsessions of young teenage immature boys, and girls as well.  There is also Carl, a drug dealer and aspiring sociopath, who is also madly in love with Lori, and will not tolerate any other competition.  He had been hooking up with Lori for a little while as he was giving her diet pills.  Also, a history teacher, Howard the Coward, a former Seabrook student who was disgraced for allowing a star athlete to get paralyzed in his place, factors into the plot.  Howard lives with his American girlfriend, but he is dissatisfied, and becomes infatuated with a new French geography teacher.

At the Halloween dance, Howard hooks up with the geography teacher, Aurelie, and he breaks up with his girlfriend, throwing all the eggs into that basket.  During the dance, Skippy escapes with Lori and they take pills and hang out and kiss, to the disbelief of most of the other students.  Skippy and Lori begin an awkward relationship, in which it is eventually revealed that Lori is just using him to make Carl jealous, even though she does like Skippy.  Also, on the Howard front, Aurelie has a fiancee and she leaves the school to get married, leaving Howard heartbroken and alone.  He has to deal with the Automator, the acting principal Greg, who is obsessed with renovating the school and breaking many of the Catholic traditions.  There are still priests teaching there, such as Father Green, who has to grapple with the guilt of molesting boys in Africa in the past.

Carl finds out about Skippy, and tries to beat him up, but Skippy miraculously manages to land a solid punch and knock him out.  However, Carl retaliates by hooking up with Lori, videotaping a blowjob, and sending the video to Skippy.  The shock of the video, and all the other stress of life, send him over the edge, and he collapses during the donut eating contest and dies while writing 'tell lori' in jam on the floor. 

Ruprecht is obviously devastated, and he gives up all nerdiness and physics and just becomes a drone that gets picked on contstantly.  Lori becomes depresses as well because she is wracked with guilt.  Howard tries to rally the students by taking them on an impromptu field trip, but this gets him fired.  The other friends rally around Ruprecht in the end at a school concert, and convince him to try one last time to communicate with the other dimension, where Skippy is believed to be.  Ruprecht plays music while also running a machine he built, and Lori sings a song from the clinic where she is held.  The story ends with a little bit of hope, as Ruprecht connects with Lori, and Skippy's memory is able to live on among them.

It was an enjoyable and well written novel.  Very accessible and stylized.  Murray is very talented, and  tells the story from all the main characters' points of views.  He uses great imagery and different styles, and is able to create both a comic mood and a tragic one.  I feel terrible for Skippy, and I also hate the people that did it to him, but I also hope for their redemption.  I would recommend checking it out.  Three and a a half out of five stars.

No comments:

Post a Comment