Rather than, say, foregrounding the constructed and unstable nature of reality through unreliable narration and winking gestures toward the fictiveness of the text, Iyer's self-deprecating presence in the story makes his prose more direct and his satire more poignantly pathetic.
Fascinating review of Spurious and Dogma by Saelan Twerdy at The New Inquiry.
Published on April 06, 2012 09:32