A savvy street-smart man working for sub-minimum wage. Santa Battaglia: His mother’s brassy, comedic friend.
The story follows Ignatius’s disastrous attempts to join the workforce to help his mother pay off a debt. From a chaotic stint at a pants factory to a surreal attempt at selling hot dogs, his adventures bring him into contact with a vibrant cast of New Orleans characters: His "ex-girlfriend" and intellectual rival.
The heart of the novel is , a "modern-day Quixote" living in 1960s New Orleans. He is a gargantuan, eccentric, and misanthropic intellectual who lives with his mother. Armed with a frantic worldview based on medieval philosophy (specifically Boethius), Ignatius wages a one-man war against the "lack of geometry and theology" in the modern world. Plot and Style
Considered one of the greatest comedic novels in literature, ( A Confederacy of Dunces ) is as famous for its content as it is for the tragic history of its author, John Kennedy Toole . The Protagonist: Ignatius J. Reilly
Toole’s writing is celebrated for its and its pitch-perfect capture of New Orleans dialects and atmosphere. The Tragedy and Triumph of Publication
The novel’s real-world backstory is bittersweet. After failing to find a publisher during his lifetime, John Kennedy Toole died by suicide in 1969. His mother, , spent years relentlessly pitching the manuscript until novelist Walker Percy finally read it. Upon its publication in 1980, it became an instant classic and posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981. Why It Endures
Despite being written over 60 years ago, Ignatius J. Reilly remains a precursor to the modern "internet contrarian." The book is a masterpiece of satire that balances biting social critique with genuine, laugh-out-loud absurdity.
A savvy street-smart man working for sub-minimum wage. Santa Battaglia: His mother’s brassy, comedic friend.
The story follows Ignatius’s disastrous attempts to join the workforce to help his mother pay off a debt. From a chaotic stint at a pants factory to a surreal attempt at selling hot dogs, his adventures bring him into contact with a vibrant cast of New Orleans characters: His "ex-girlfriend" and intellectual rival. La Conjura De Los Necios John Kennedy Toole (...
The heart of the novel is , a "modern-day Quixote" living in 1960s New Orleans. He is a gargantuan, eccentric, and misanthropic intellectual who lives with his mother. Armed with a frantic worldview based on medieval philosophy (specifically Boethius), Ignatius wages a one-man war against the "lack of geometry and theology" in the modern world. Plot and Style A savvy street-smart man working for sub-minimum wage
Considered one of the greatest comedic novels in literature, ( A Confederacy of Dunces ) is as famous for its content as it is for the tragic history of its author, John Kennedy Toole . The Protagonist: Ignatius J. Reilly From a chaotic stint at a pants factory
Toole’s writing is celebrated for its and its pitch-perfect capture of New Orleans dialects and atmosphere. The Tragedy and Triumph of Publication
The novel’s real-world backstory is bittersweet. After failing to find a publisher during his lifetime, John Kennedy Toole died by suicide in 1969. His mother, , spent years relentlessly pitching the manuscript until novelist Walker Percy finally read it. Upon its publication in 1980, it became an instant classic and posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981. Why It Endures
Despite being written over 60 years ago, Ignatius J. Reilly remains a precursor to the modern "internet contrarian." The book is a masterpiece of satire that balances biting social critique with genuine, laugh-out-loud absurdity.
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