'A Dirty Job' is the ninth novel by
Christopher Moore, published in
2006. While reflecting the author's
absurdist tendencies, the content of the novel draws in no small part from his own experiences in tending to the needs of close family and friends who were in the stages of dying.
Plot
The story centers on Charlie Asher, a beta-male who leads a satisfying life as the owner and proprietor of a second-hand store in
San Francisco. At the moment when his wife Rachel unexpectedly dies in the hospital shortly after the birth of their first child (Sophie), Charlie becomes involved in a new sideline of retrieving the souls of the dying, so as to protect them from the forces of the underworld. He only gradually realizes the ramifications of this business as various clues and complications unfold. Ultimately Charlie resolves to confront directly the forces of darkness.
Themes
Like all of
Christopher Moore's other novels, this one is
humanistic, with the
everyman characters coming out in triumph, and slightly
absurdist, with odd situations, gags and sexual jokes.
A running theme of the novel is the notion of the
human "beta-male" (Moore's concept), who is inferior in social status and strength to the
alpha-male, but who survives by the sheer power of imagination.
The novel nods to such ancient texts such as the Tibetan ''
Book of the Dead''. ''A Dirty Job'' also invokes mythological creatures such as the
Morrigan, and invents a new type of re-animated life-form based on the "Curious Monstrosities" of
Monique Motil, to elaborate the plot.
Movie Rights and Popularity
Shortly after its release, ''A Dirty Job'' reached 9th place on the
New York Times Best Seller list. An unabridged commercial
compact disc recording of ''A Dirty Job'' has been issued with narration by
Fisher Stevens. As of August
2006 the motion picture rights have been acquired by
Chris Columbus and his company, 1492 Productions.
[1] In October ''A Dirty Job'' won the
2006 Quill Award in the category of General Fiction.
[2]
Cameos
A few characters from Moore's earlier novels continue their lives in this story: Minty Fresh from ''
Coyote Blue'' and, because of the story's San Francisco setting (where ''
Bloodsucking Fiends'' took place), Jody (unnamed in a cameo appearance), The Emperor (and his two "soldiers", Bummer and Lazarus), and the detectives Alphonse Rivera and Nick Cavuto. Jody's meeting with Charlie Asher is also shown, from her perspective, in ''
You Suck: A Love Story'', the continuation of ''Bloodsucking Fiends''.
External links
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Author's own website for the book, including excerpt of first chapter
★ '"The Beta-Male Manifesto"' (in the author's blog, drawn partly from the novel):
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Part 1
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Part 2
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Part 3
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Part 4 (conclusion)
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Memory book with photographs from Moore's book-signing tour for the original hardback edition during 21 March-23 April
2006
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Audio MP3 podcast of Moore's appearance on 28 March
2006 at the Tattered Cover Bookstore,
Denver,
Colorado
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A color drawing depicting Charlie, Sophie, and some non-human characters in the novel, by artist Matt Stewart
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The "sartorial creature" dolls of Monique Motil, which provided the inspiration for the "
squirrel people" in Moore's novel