Tattoo This Madness In by Daniel Allen Cox

by Dogpatch 6 Replies latest jw friends

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch

    Punk-rock ex-JWs writing books!

    October 5th, 2006
    Tattoo This Madness In by Daniel Allen Cox


    Heart-racing literary madness
    Matthew Firth

    alt
    Tattoo This Madness In: By Daniel Allen Cox (Dusty Owl, 2006, 98 pp)

    Hell-fire debut launched by new Ottawa small press

    Daniel Allen Cox's short novel Tattoo This Madness In (Dusty Owl Press) helps restore my faith in Canada's young writers. Cox - along with Chandra Mayor, Joey Comeau and others - isn't happy to fall in line and barf out more soft-around-the-middle fiction palatable for the middle class. Cox et al. are young guns who write like young guns; their fiction is laced with piss and vinegar. Cox, in particular, takes his CanLit cues from bold and inventive writers such as Derek McCormack and Tony Burgess, instead of stodgy farts like Alice Munro.

    In chapter 2 of the book, the protagonist, Damian Spitz, a teen on the run from Jehovah's Witness brainwashing, cuts loose at a Dead Kennedys concert. It's no fluke that the DKs open with their anthem Chickenshit Conformist from Bedtime for Democracy. Cox picked this song for a reason: It's the theme for the entire book. Damian has rejected his upbringing and refuses to do as his parents have done; he refuses to conform to the stultifying, self-hating doctrines of their religion. It's been stuffed down his gob for too long.

    When the Smurfs - of all things - are centred out in a sermon as being pawns of Satan, Damian can't take it any longer. He goes apeshit in Kingdom Hall, lashing out against a church elder and the religion. Thus begins a quest to willingly disfellowship himself. In Jehovah's Witness speak, it's the equivalent to being excommunicated. Damian, after years of denial, decides he will feel rather than think, he will bask

    Click Here
    in impulse and sensation and take others along with him for the ride. What follows is a hedonistic, sexually charged, violent romp fuelled by a punk rock soundtrack.

    Key in the book is that Damian discovers his sexual leanings in his emancipation. He goes from being a teen terrified to masturbate because God will hate him for it, to ass-f%$&* a fellow ex-Jehovah's Witness on the hood of a car. A wee bit of a radical transformation, but when the fetters of indoctrination come off, they really come off.

    Cox's prose style is also key to the book's success. He writes with energy. The story surges from word one. Cox doesn't bog the reader down with insipid metaphors or boring descriptions - his characters' actions forcefully drive the book forward.

    Cox lives in Montreal, though the novel is set in Miami. The publisher - Dusty Owl Press - is right here in Ottawa, giving this city a role in pumping fresh blood into the old CanLit heart with Tattoo This Madness In.

  • Dogpatch
  • fullofdoubtnow
    fullofdoubtnow

    I'm not sure it's the sort of book I'd read personally, but I hope he does well with it. It might be fiction, but the main character sounds a little like a few jws I know who left the cult in their teens and went a little wild. It also seems to highlight some of their more idiotic ideas, as in this part of the review:

    Key in the book is that Damian discovers his sexual leanings in his emancipation. He goes from being a teen terrified to masturbate because God will hate him for it,

    It could be a book for teen jws to read, secretly of course.

  • Seeker4
    Seeker4

    I'm not sure that a young JW discovering that he's gay is "an idiotic idea.'

    It takes courage to write from a place like that, though it'll be hard for the middle-aged to connect with the teen angst, perhaps.

    Thanks for the review, Randy.

    S4

  • fullofdoubtnow
    fullofdoubtnow
    I'm not sure that a young JW discovering that he's gay is "an idiotic idea.'

    S4,

    I was highlighting the wts view of masturbation, as the line said....."he goes from a teen terrified to masturbate because God will hate him for it", which is the part I was referring to as an idiotic idea, that the wts condemn a totally natural act that all young people take part in as unclean, and punishable by discipline.

    I was not inferring that someone discovering they are gay is an idiotic idea.

  • Bodhisattva1320
    Bodhisattva1320

    i hope they make it a movie :) hehe

  • Seeker4
    Seeker4

    fullofdoubtnow:

    Oops. Sorry. I completely misread you!

    S4

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit