 |
The King of Lies by John Hart
Book Summary InformationAuthor: John Hart Edition: Mass Market Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2007-04-03 ISBN: 0312363753 Number of pages: 400 Publisher: Minotaur Books
Book Reviews of The King of LiesBook Review: The book's title is meaningful Summary: 4 Stars
I am going to suggest an interpertation of "The King of Lies" that all is not as it appears in this seemingly conventional thriller/ psychologically oriented mystery.
Specifically I believe that the book's title, "The King of Lies" is meaningful and that our protagonist, Work Pickens is, in point of fact, the most unreliable of narrators. He is the King of Lies. I know, our instincts as readers is to trust the narrator. Afterall, only from the narrator do we learn anything. When a narrator appears to be vivid in his descriptions and recounting of events, how could he be misleading us? Nonetheless, Work is both misleads us as readers and more fundamentally he misleads himself.
First of all, understand that Work is not an attractive character. He is a drunk, is an unfaithful husband and is probably not a very good lawyer. (Regarding this last point - early in the book we are told that at this point, some 18 months after the disappearance of his father, all of his clients come from court appointments. His father, Ezra, had an extremely lucrative practice for which Work did much of the behind the scenes work ... and every last one of those clients has disappeared. It is hard to imagine that ALL the clients would go away if Work was performing satisfactorily. Ezra probably tosses Work the occasional contract review or will drafting that comes out of any legal business relationship. We never hear of him winning a case in court. No, chances are he isn't very good at the law.)
So why don't we immediately see that much of what Work says has only a second hand relation to the truth? It is because he habitually lies to himself. He is self-deluded being ultimately a narcissist of the highest order. He doesn't really see other people. They only exist as a reflection of himself. Thus, in telling about his legal clients, when he writes of their self-delusion (as in the opening pages) or fear of prison what he is really speaking of is HIS self-delusion and HIS fear of prison. That is why when he given perfectly reasonable advice by the DA Douglas, his neighbor Dr. Stone or the wanderer Max, he follows none of it. He is impervious to reasonable advice because it does not come from him.
No doubt, his father, Ezra, was a hard man, a man not given to tenderness or compassion. Ezra has succeeded in spite of coming from the bottom of society. He scratched and clawed his way to success and the trappings of success. By comparison, despite whatever emotional abuse Ezra has heaped on Work, Work's way in the world has been easy. And so, when Ezra looks at the picture on his desk of himself as desperately poor child he also sees in that picture his siblings and his parents who did nothing to change the circumstances of their lives. He sees this same passivity and and lack of ambition in his wife and his son. As far as Ezra can tell, Work is a weakling who would be content to drink too much beer and slide back down to the lower rungs of society. If he never intended to be interviewed by Detective Mills, rather than being up front, he passively waits until he is arrested before talking to her. Rather than being up front with his wife about his marriage, he waits passively for her to make an issue of their relationship. Work is a moral and physical coward which is consistent with being a complete narcissist. The narcissistic personality will do anything to avoid being uncomfortable, because discomfort means there is a significant reality out there that has nothing to do with you.
Being a narcissist, makes for being a terrible detective. Work locks on to thinking that his sister his father's murder, because 1) he wants to kill his father and 2) he assumes if he were his sister, he would want to kill his father ... and since he didn't kill his father, his sister must have. Once does this he is incapable of looking in any other direction.
Work Pickens operates in self-destructive ways (destroying his office phone, offending his father's for no good reason, etc.) that indicate that he is uncomfortable where he finds himself. Ezra was probably right that without his assistance, Work would not amount to much. And so when the novel resolves the action generally favorably for Ward, one has the sense that he was far more lucky rather than good.
Summary of The King of LiesJackson Workman Pickens--known to most as "Work"--mindlessly holds together his disintegrating life: a failing law practice left to him when his father, Ezra, mysteriously disappeared, a distant wife who shares their loveless marriage, and an estranged sister who bore the brunt of their childhood trauma. And then Ezra's body is discovered. Set to inherit his father's fortune, Work becomes a prime suspect. But so does his sister, Jean. As much as Work's life was overshadowed by his domineering father, Jean's life was nearly destroyed by him. But does that make her capable of a vicious murder? Fearing the worst, Work launches his own investigation, crossing paths with a power-hungry detective, a string of damning evidence, and the ugly rumors that swirl within his small, moneyed Southern town. Desperate for the redemption that has eluded him for so many years and stripped of everything he once valued, he fights to save his sister and clear his name--in this poignant and thrilling anatomy of a murder and its ripple effect within a family and a community.
Literature & Fiction Books
|
 |