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Vengeance Is Mine, All Others Pay Cash

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Vivid, bawdy, comic, and arresting, the exciting new novel by the Indonesian phenomenon, Eka Kurniawan

Told in short, cinematic bursts, Vengeance Is Mine, All Others Pay Cash is gloriously pulpy. Ajo Kawir, a lower-class Javanese teenage boy excited about sex, likes to spy on fellow villagers in flagrante, but one night he ends up witnessing the savage rape of a beautiful crazy woman by two policemen. Deeply traumatized, he becomes impotent. His efforts to get his virility back all fail, and Ajo Kawir turns to fighting as a way to vent his frustrations. He gets such a fearsome reputation as a brawler that he is hired to kill a thug named The Tiger, but instead Ajo Kawir falls in love with Iteung, a gorgeous female bodyguard who works for the local mafia. Alas, the course of true love never did run smooth... Fast-forward a decade. Now a truck driver, Ajo Kawir has reached a new equanimity, thinking that his penis may be trying to teach him a lesson and even consulting it in many situations as if it were his guru—love may yet triumph.

Vengeance Is Mine, All Others Pay Cash shows Eka Kurniawan in a gritty, comic, pungent mode that fans of Quentin Tarantino will appreciate. But even with its liberal peppering of fights, high-speed car chases, and ladies heaving with desire, the novel continues to explore Kurniawan's familiar themes of female agency in a violent male world dominated by petty criminals and a corrupt police state.

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    • Kirkus

      July 15, 2017
      Pulp fiction from one of Indonesia's most important young writers.Beauty Is a Wound (2015), Kurniawan's English-language debut, was vast in scope and boldly executed. It was rude and brutal, but it was also funny and beautiful. This newly translated novel is simply rude and brutal. The carnage and acts of sexual assault in the first book were starkly depicted, but they were also imbued with a fabulist sensibility. The author was exploring the violent history of his country through a folkloric lens and using the language and modes of pop culture to make it immediate. He seems to be trying to do something similar here, but the results are much closer to Man Tiger (2015) than to the earlier work. Both latter novels are spare and quick rather than epic, and the fact that they're short, at least, is good. The protagonist of this latest book is a young man whose impotence is his most defining feature. Ajo Kiwar's flaccid penis is both a private struggle and a public fact. There are many scenes of Ajo Kiwar trying to rouse his flaccid penis and many moments in which he talks to and consults with his flaccid penis. Ajo Kiwar's flaccid penis is the first thing that comes to the minds of his friends and acquaintances when they think of him, and it is the subject of much of the book's dialogue. Even when he's at his best, character development is not one of Kurniawan's strengths. The mythic qualities of Beauty Is a Wound made up for this lack of depth; the characters there were real people but also archetypes and figures from fairy tales. Ajo Kiwar is just flat and uninteresting, and none of the other characters are much more compelling--not even the sexy lady bodyguard who falls in love with him after they beat each other soundly. There's a lot of rape in this novel, and it feels even more gratuitous than many murders. Tedious, and unpleasantly so.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 4, 2017
      Kurniawan (Beauty Is a Wound) tells the ribald, noir-inflected, and oddly epic story of a man’s quest to regain his sexual virility. Teenage Javanese roughneck Ajo Kawir loses the use of his “little bird” after witnessing the rape of a widow by two soldiers. He tries everything to revive it: prostitutes, rubbing it with chili pepper, even getting it stung by bees. He is only kept from chopping off the offending member with an axe by the intervention of his friend. But it becomes a matter of honor after a brilliant martial artist named Iteung, a member of the criminal syndicate known as the Empty Hand, beats him senseless in protection of her boss and he falls in love with her. Ajo Kawir’s work interferes with their romance: he’s an enforcer for the unsavory Uncle Bunny and is assigned to murder a famous killer known only as the Tiger. After being imprisoned for his crimes for a number of years, Ajo Kawir takes a job as a truck driver and becomes mentor to a younger man named Gaptooth Mono, who must face his own archenemy—and all the while Iteung dreams of killing the soldiers who forever deprived Ajo Kawir of his erection. This is an almost unbelievably fun and weird novel.

    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2017

      Ajo Kawir has the worst imaginable problem for a teenage boy: he cannot get an erection. But Indonesian writer Kurniawan, who came to prominence here and worldwide with the sensational Beauty Is a Wound, isn't delivering a smarmy sex comedy. Instead, he links his protagonist's impotence to pervasive male violence. Joining a friend to spy on a crazy woman with a beautiful body, Ajo Kawir witnesses her horrific rape by two policemen and thereafter cannot get it up, philosophically discussing the situation with his limp member and wondering what it's trying to teach him. He sublimates his rage by fighting, for which he becomes renowned--he's even contracted to kill the notorious thug, the Tiger--but on one mission he meets Iteung, a young woman who learned martial arts to stave off sexual predation and proves to be as spectacular a fighter as he is. They fall deeply in love, though the road to happiness isn't easy, and Iteung demonstrates her fighting worth in a propulsive narrative that unsparingly, almost jauntily, describes how men pound one another as a way to live. VERDICT Not on the grand scale of Beauty Is a Wound, this intense, unsettling slice-of-life read is somehow less grim than illuminating. Not light reading but not just for literati. [See Prepub Alert, 2/27/17.]--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      March 15, 2017

      Shooting-star Indonesian author Kurniawan made his English-language debut in 2015 to considerable acclaim with the laceratingly beautiful Beauty Is a Wound, and his next work has the same raw feel. Ajo Kawir is a lower-class Javanese teenager whose rampant interest in sex is blunted when he sees two policemen brutally rape a deranged woman and tries to channel his frustrations by fighting. Kurniawan smartly plays with pop culture tropes as he investigates male violence and political repression; sophisticated readers must check out.

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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