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Double Negative (1980)

por David Carkeet

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

Series: Jeremy Cook (1)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
300987,339 (3.31)16
Dedicated to the study of toddlers and their development of verbal skills, the Wabash Institute should be staffed by kinder, gentler scholars, but instead is home to a nest of supremely cranky academics. When one of them is bludgeoned to death, Jeremy Cook'the Institute's premier scholar and the book's socially clueless hero'becomes the prime suspect. To clear his name, Cook resolves to solve the case, even if it means taking time off from his hobby of teaching imaginary words to the Institute's tiny ?subjects.' While gleefully skewering academia, Carkeet'himself a professor of linguistics'also provides a spectacularly ingenious puzzle. ?Mystery stories that have a really original solution to the crime are very rare, ? said the New York Times Book Review. ?but Dr. Carkeet has found one.'… (más)
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Pop Quiz: What book has these plot points?

1. The unlikely protagonist is a quirky academic.
2. The protagonist works in a environment with an assortment of other quirky academics.
3. The protagonist's boss is a self-interested bore.
4. The protagonist has a love interest for whom there is a rival.
5. The protagonist is assigned by his boss to write and deliver a lecture that he does not wish to do.

If you answered Kingsley Amis's Lucky Jim you would be absolutely correct. But, if you answered David Carkeet's "Double Negative" you would also be absolutely correct.

Although quirky academic characters and locales probably feature in dozens of novels, I read "Double Negative" with increasing enjoyment as the parallels kept falling into place and by the time of the assigned lecture I was firmly convinced that Carkeet was following Amis's overall "Lucky Jim" plot arc.

Instead of Amis's English university, Carkeet places his story at the fictional Wabash Institute in southern Indiana, USA. a combined child care facility and linguistic studies centre. The academics are linguists studying the speech of young children. "Double Negative" shares a mostly comic tone with "Lucky Jim" except for the murder mystery element.

There seemed to be a lot of plot points that weren't properly tied-up at the end so Carkeet doesn't really fit the model of genre mystery writer. Nevertheless, this was a very entertaining read made even more so by the between the lines homage to Kingsley Amis.

Notes
Quirky characters are one thing, but a lot of quirky names makes for a hard to follow book. I ended up doing my own cast of characters list to help out, so here it is for others if needed:

Wabash Institute
Walter Wach: administrator at the Wabash Institute
Mary: Secretary to Walter Wach
Jeremy (called Jay by some) Cook: linguist, protagonist of the story
Ed Woeps: linguist, Cook’s main friend at the Institute
Arthur Stiph: older linguist, sleeps often at the office
Emory Milke: linguist, romantic rival to Jeremy Cook
Adam Aaskhugh: linguist, gossips, snoops
Clyde Orffmann: linguist, laughs very loudly
Miss Pristam: linguist, out of town
Sally Good: chief caretaker (child care worker)
Paula Nouvelles: new caretaker, potential love interest of Jeremy Cook
various others

Non-Wabash Institute
Henry Philpot: journalist, researching a story on the Wabash Institute
Mrs. Adelle Stiph: wife of Arthur Stiph
Mrs. Helen Woeps: wife of Ed Woeps
Wally Woeps: 16-month old son of Ed & Helen Woeps, Jeremy Cook is doing a study of his speech
Amy Woeps: daughter of Ed & Helen Woeps
Lieutenant Leaf: Police detective

Stray Observations
• I did not notice the phrase "Double Negative" used at all in the book, but I assume its use in the title is meant as a reference to the two murders.
• The closest thing to "Lucky Jim"'s faces (Jim makes mock faces of other people behind their backs) seemed to be Jeremy Cook making odd phone calls with abrupt hangups.
• David Carkeet wrote two more books featuring linguist Jeremy Cook, The Full Catastrophe: A Novel and The Error of Our Ways, but they aren’t murder mysteries.
• Although the "Lucky Jim" inspiration isn't mentioned in the 1982 Penguin Crime edition, I found that the online "Discussion Questions" by Overlook Press for the 2010 edition http://www.overlookpress.com/rg/doublenegative.pdf has this to say:
"The author has acknowledged his debt to three books that influenced the writing of Double Negative. One is Learning How To Mean: Explorations In The Development Of Language, a scholarly monograph by British linguist M.A.K. Halliday, who studied “idiophenomena” in his toddler son just as Cook studied them in Wally. Another is Peter Dickinson’s The Poison Oracle, a mystery about linguistic research in a primate center. The third is Kingsley Amis’ classic comic novel, Lucky Jim. You might know Dickinson’s or Amis’ novels. If so, can you point to similarities between them and Double Negative?" ( )
  alanteder | Jul 6, 2016 |
  living2read | Oct 13, 2012 |
  books4micks | Oct 13, 2012 |
Double Negative by David Carkeet
My rating: 3 of 5 stars


In my opinion the best of Carkeet's 3 novels featuring intrepid linguist Jeremy Cook is The Full Catastrophe (second in the series), and one wouldn't necessarily need to have read this first installment to get Full Enjoyment from it. This, however, was an enjoyable read and filled in a bit of background on the main characters. Readers with a taste for quirky academic humor (masking some sharp insights into human nature and the ways it unwittingly reveals itself in the communication process) should find this a satisfying addition to their shelves. ( )
  booksinthebelfry | Oct 25, 2011 |
I had read in several sources that this was a wittily funny mystery, so I was eager to read it. Maybe my expectations were too high. Whatever the reason, I didn't enjoy the book very much. I didn't think the humor or the mystery was successful.

The setting is unusual - a university-affiliated linguistics institute combined with a preschool/daycare center for the purpose of studying language development in children. The way in which the murderer's identity is discovered is unusual, too. That's about all I liked about the book.

I can imagine a lot of possibilities for humor in the interaction between the linguists and the children they observe. It's too bad the children were barely present in the book. The book focuses almost exclusively on the linguists and their interrelationships. I didn't like the main character, linguist Jeremy Cook. He was as obnoxious as Dr. House (of the Fox TV series), only he managed to hide his disdain for almost everyone else better than House does. The mystery left several elements of the crime unexplained. In fact, near the end of the book, after the murderer has been identified, two characters talked about some of the things still left unexplained. Their conclusion? "It doesn't matter, really. We solved it without solving all of that."

Not recommended. ( )
1 vota cbl_tn | Oct 6, 2009 |
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» Añade otros autores (1 posible)

Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
David Carkeetautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Stuart, NeilDiseñador de cubiertaautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado

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Dedicated to the study of toddlers and their development of verbal skills, the Wabash Institute should be staffed by kinder, gentler scholars, but instead is home to a nest of supremely cranky academics. When one of them is bludgeoned to death, Jeremy Cook'the Institute's premier scholar and the book's socially clueless hero'becomes the prime suspect. To clear his name, Cook resolves to solve the case, even if it means taking time off from his hobby of teaching imaginary words to the Institute's tiny ?subjects.' While gleefully skewering academia, Carkeet'himself a professor of linguistics'also provides a spectacularly ingenious puzzle. ?Mystery stories that have a really original solution to the crime are very rare, ? said the New York Times Book Review. ?but Dr. Carkeet has found one.'

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