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Review: 'Guy Novel' is widely improbable spy thriller

"Guy Novel" (Permanent Press), by Michael Ryan

Michael Ryan is primarily known as a Guggenheim-winning poet, although he has also written a critically acclaimed memoir and a book of essays. But his first novel, "Guy Novel," is part wildly improbable spy thriller and part goofy love story in the vein of "The Hangover" movie trilogy.

Robert Wilder, a struggling stand-up comic from Los Angeles, is getting married. But when he strolls into a bank to fetch some cash for the honeymoon, he's beguiled by a stunningly beautiful stranger, falls into bed with her and wakes up too late for the ceremony.

He takes the mystery woman to his honeymoon suite in a luxury hotel in Mexico, where she promptly vanishes, leaving behind a note warning him not to look for her. But of course, he does. As a result, he finds himself caught in a web of international intrigue - an unfamiliar world of professional spies, mujahedeen warriors and President Bill Clinton.

The farcical plot is an odd fit with Ryan's sublime literary prose style. The book is being marketed as a thriller, a genre whose fans may be initially put off by the author's dense paragraphs and long, complex sentences. But readers who get past that are in for a funny, beautifully written roller-coaster ride.

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Bruce DeSilva, winner of the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award, is the author of the Mulligan crime novels including "The Dread Line."

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Online:

http://brucedesilva.com/

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