Breakfast on Pluto

by Patrick McCabe

Hardcover, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

PR6063.C32B74 1998

Publication

Harpercollins (1998), Edition: 1st, Hardcover, 202 pages

Description

"In the 1970s, Patrick ""Pussy"" Braden, who piles his transsexual trade in London, finds himself inevitably drawn to Northern Ireland's maelstrom of violence and tragedy."

Media reviews

McCabe ist ein beeindruckendes Buch gelungen. Beeindruckend deshalb, weil er sich nicht scheut, Absurdes herrlich skurril zu erzählen. Der zweite Rezeptionsschritt jedoch ist lehrreicher: der nämlich, dass vieles in "Breakfast on Pluto" so absurd gar nicht ist, sondern von der
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Konform-Gesellschaft lediglich an den Rand des Außenseitertums gedrängt wurde. Abgedrängt heißt jedoch nicht vergessen. McCabe sorgt mit diesem Buch dafür.
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User reviews

LibraryThing member Othemts
Brilliant satire in which a transgendered youth Patrick "Pussy" Braden is a male prostitute working the streets of London in the 1970's when he gets mistakenly identified as an IRA agent. Pretty much all political and religious views are skewered in this novel which is also very touching. I saw
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McCabe read from this book in Brookline, MA in 1999 and his readings are quite a brilliant performance. I found the movie adaptation of this book unwatchable, so don't pass up on the book if you didn't like the movie.
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LibraryThing member IreneF
I picked up this book--a Booker prize finalist--because I saw the movie a few years ago. As always, the book was better than the movie. (The only exception I've come across is The Man Who Would Be King, a Rudyard Kipling tale brilliantly directed by John Huston.) Yet the film's images stayed with
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me and probably helped me stay grounded to the story, which is not told linearly. Plus the first-person narrator is not exactly compus mentis.

Most of the book is told by Patrick (Pussy) Braden, an Irish transvestite prostitute who dreams--obsesses--of a home and a loving family. The separation between fantasy and reality is not always distinct, yet somehow doesn't matter--Pussy's disturbed inner state echoes the insanity of Irish violence in the 1970s. "[My foster mother] used to have this habit of lighting cigarette papers and sending them flying up the flue to the light, to go spinning across the stars as far as Pluto or wherever else they wanted to go and that was what I felt like now as I watched the blur of yellow...."

Occasional chapters narrate the activities of others--especially the paramilitaries--but the bulk of the book is given over to Pussy and his tortured but flamboyant inner and outer life. Pussy reacts to paternal rejection and neglect much the way the monster reacted to Frankenstein in Mary Shelley's novel--but in this case the rage and despair is expressed in a rich fantasy life. Conversely, he idolizes his mother.

Meanwhile, Pussy leaves rural Ireland for the excitement of London in the early seventies. The music and color of that period runs through the book; the title is a phrase from a hit song. He sets himself up in London as a street prostitute--a risky life at best--made more threatening by the random violence of the Troubles. An unsuspected resourcefulness allows Pussy to accommodate--barely--both personal and political pain.

Despite the horror of Pussy's situation, the book is a pleasure to read and fairly short. I tore through it in one sitting.
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LibraryThing member ottopod
Funny and distressing. Darker than the film, which was more candy floss. I wanted to know if Puss ever found happiness. Then I wondered if any of us do, in the end.
LibraryThing member WinterFox
I picked this up a while back because I'd seen the movie, and because I'd always meant to read Patrick McCabe. I've been curious for years, and this gave me a chance to get into one. I wouldn't have called the movie happy, although it goes out on a fairly high note, but this is grades below happy.
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Not that you walk away depressed, but perhaps sobered.

This is the story of Patrick "Pussy" Braden, a transsexual growing up in Ireland and then moving to London during the IRA bombing period. He was abandoned as a baby by his mother, the child of an affair (and a probably non-consensual one) between a young woman, say 16 or so, and the village priest. So he has all sorts of issues, and it's clear from the frame of the book that he's been in long-term psychiatric care from pretty early on. The story has a lot of dark bits to it, but not gruesomely so.

The thing that really sells this book is the style; much of the dirty bits (Pussy becomes a prostitute, you see) and the violent bits are skimmed past in interesting ways, and yet, at other times, in his fantasies, come out in some detail. The style, almost breathless, spinning words and rambling scenery and such, is just great. You really buy the character, and his view on the world. That world is dark and crazy here, and that's remarked upon as well, but Pussy makes his way through.

This is short, and a fairly fast read, but not light. If you want to try it, and you're interested in the time period, I'd say go for it. Just don't expect the movie when you do.
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LibraryThing member GingerbreadMan
Feels very much like another take on the structure of Butcher Boy, starting out in a strongly personal languge and small town misery, then following our main character as he/she loses the grip on reality, gradually making the reader more and more unsure of what's real and what's imaginary. But the
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story itself feels thinner here, and I get the feeling McCabe is stretching and stretching and stretching to try and flesh it out. To me, it doesn't quite get there. It feels short and stumped, and I find the flamboyant style in which the book is written to be mostly annoying. What stays with me are a couple of scenes about the horror of terrorism in the local community, such as the story of the guy getting tortured to death for being a catholic going home from a dance. Or the numerous threatening visits in your home from masked men with voices you recognise. All in all, a bit of a disappointment.
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LibraryThing member malrubius
This is a difficult book, especially if you don't know much about the IRA. Nonetheless, it is a compelling and transgressive story that never lets up. Unfortunately, the hardcover edition that I read is riddled with typos, especially near the end, which makes a difficult book border on frustrating.
LibraryThing member jphamilton
Mr. Patrick "Pussy" Braden is Patrick McCabe's fascinating misfit hero(ine) in Breakfast on Pluto, a novel that was a finalist for the Booker Prize in 1998. This former number one bestseller in Ireland is the story of a young man who makes his way to London to prostitute himself, dressed in his
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favorite blousy tops and tight miniskirts. This strange story is revealed as Pussy writes it all down for his psychiatrist, Dr. Terence. Pussy's seamy life of prostitution around Piccadilly Circus is obviously centered on sex, but the violence of The Troubles is very much a part of this story. Bombings and death explode into the book several times. The reader isn't always sure what is going on because of some misdirection and clever plot twists, but all is nicely folded within McCabe's fine writing. He deftly shifts time and leaves some areas of the story unclear, but, by the last page, it all works together to create a disturbing and moving book.

McCabe has written four other novels, with The Butcher Boy being the best known, most likely because of the film for which McCabe and Neil Jordon co-wrote the screenplay. That film did a great job of capturing the McCabe style. His characters are so well drawn that their images stick in your mind's eye. Now, you will find these characters disturbing, but if you've an odd sense of humor, they'll also amuse you to no end. McCabe's writing is to be watched for, so be on the lookout for a collection of stories promised for the near future.

(4/99)
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LibraryThing member SeriousGrace
This story will unhinge you a little. Patrick Braden starts his life as a babe left on the doorsteps of a church where he is taken in by Father Bernard McIvor, who just so happens to be Patrick's real father. Not knowing what else to do with the child, the pastor takes Patrick to an abusive and
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alcoholic foster home. It is around this time that Patrick decides he is a transvestite and starts calling himself "Pussy". While Pussy shares his life story in lighthearted, sometimes amusing, sometimes matter of fact anecdotes, there is always a dark and violent undercurrent. That can't be helped when the protagonist's boyfriend is murdered, Pussy becomes a prostitute and gets involved in terrorism. Need I say more?
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Awards

Booker Prize (Longlist — 1998)

Language

Original publication date

1998-05-28

Physical description

202 p.; 8.7 inches

ISBN

0060193409 / 9780060193409

Local notes

OCLC = 1023
Google Books

Other editions

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