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Book Review of Vile Bodies

Vile Bodies
reviewed on + 813 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2


This is his second novel, a not quite sequel to Decline and Fall, although many of the same zany characters populate it. And, Its party time! Adam Fenwick-Symes and Nina Blount have an off and on, yet unannounced, engagement. Heres the problem. Hes a writer and about to become prosperous, but the money is ever elusive. He never quite gets his hands on it: at least for very long. Meanwhile she is rather blasé to the whole thing while he takes each downturn in stride: no big deal. So as their party acquaintances manage to do themselves in by various and sundry techniques, Adam and Nina plod on. The highlights of Waughs wry humor are embodies in Ninas wacky father, the Colonel, and Adams stint as a gossipexcuse, a socialcoluminist. When he runs out of celebrities, he merely invents them, going Addison and Steeles Sir Roger de Coverly several better. To end all, there seems to be no resolution for either Adam or Nina.