The Guardian - World News
| Title | Griefdogg by Michael Winkler review – a cryptic, beguiling tale about a man who turns into a dog | Source | The Guardian - World News |
| Description |
Winkler’s latest novel is ambitious, compelling and bleakly comic; it scratches a metaphysical itch you didn’t realise you had In 2016 Michael Winkler wrote an award-winning essay that mentions his “schisms” of self and experiences with depression, the pain of which “intermittently seemed unendurable”. Five years later, his surreal, “exploded non-fiction novel” Grimmish – the first self-published work shortlisted for the Miles Franklin prize – told the story of the “pain-eating” boxer Joe Grim. Now, in Griefdogg, another wry, existentially probing novel, Winkler is again plumbing psyches – his own, yours and mine. Griefdogg begins with an unnamed narrator, an implied surrogate for Winkler, struggling to draft a speech for a funeral. The deceased, we learn, is Jeffrey Watson-Johnson, a middle-aged, climate-conscious, fitness-obsessed hydrologist (a studier of water flow) living in Mildura. He fancies himself a Don Juan, though he and his wife, Martine, haven’t had sex in three years and seven months. He’s a vegan, community-minded and a “straight arrow”. He’s disciplined and monotonous, an uninspiring yet effective presence on the tennis court. He restacks the dishwasher the way he likes it. Continue reading... |
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| Link | https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/apr/17/griefdogg-by-michael-winkler-book-novel-review | Published At | 2026-04-16 20:00:14 (4 weeks ago) |
| Created At | 2026-04-16 20:16:20 | Updated At | 2026-04-16 20:16:20 |