Bring the Monkey

Bring the Monkey
A light novel

By

3.6
(5 Reviews)
Bring the Monkey by Miles Franklin

Published:

1933

Pages:

167

Downloads:

4,337

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Bring the Monkey
A light novel

By

3.6
(5 Reviews)
A spoof of the English country-house mystery/pot-boiler novel.

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Readers reviews

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3.6
Average from 5 Reviews
3.6
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3
This is bad satire so bizarre that it should be read just to appreciate the wild plot and character names. Just about every cliche from 1900's whodunnits is crammed in - jewels, maharajas, sirens, love triangles and so on. There are spoof parts which are good and satirical bits which are OK and then lengthy and pointless conversations that belong nowhere.Agatha Christie ,Arthur Conan Doyle - Thank You. May your tribe increase.
A fun story with an unpredictable ending. Sometimes hard to follow due to jargon used and character names, but the overall story stays on track and well written
3

This is a rather entertaining spoof of an old fashioned country house mystery. There are a host of unlikely characters, not to mention a monkey called Percy, rooms suddenly plunged into darkness, a missing bracelet, and finally a dead body. A well written, quirky little novel, that is certainly unusual, Miles Franklin manages to have quite a nice little dig at social conventions of the time, class and snobbery. Her cast of characters include people of different races and social backgrounds and how they are percieved by one another and interact with each other is interesting in itself. I was amused by the outlandish names of some characters - including: Swithwulf George Cedd St. Erconwald Spillbeans (Lord Tattingwood), Zarla Osterly, Ydonea Zaltuffrie and Captain Stopworth. An amusing cosy read.
I liked this book, a quirky little story, well written and quite amusing with a vast array of characters.An entertaining whodunnit ,I would recommend this book to read on a really cold miserable day, snuggled up in front of the fire with a large whiskey.
Not bad, an amusing spoof with subtle and not-so-subtle humor. The narrator (female) trails after her glamorous and beautiful friend Zarla, who is "a siren not a spectacle" and whose great talent is to listen to people. Zarla decides to get a monkey to make up for not being able to trek to the steppes of Asia or similar places (written in 1933, so the far off places were still REALLY far off and exotic). Then her social life picks up as a result. Interesting observations about people of various classes and races, some of which are not as harsh or reactionary as you might suppose from that 1933 copyright date.

I suspect the two lead characters are somewhat inspired by Holmes/Watson, and Zarla sounds like a takeoff on Katharine Hepburn, or the sort of woman Hepburn played in the 30s.