The Tax Inspector
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Edition: 1st us trade ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Very good
Jacket: Very good
Pages: Good , price clipped
Markings: Signed
A darkly comic and unsettling work of literary fiction, The Tax Inspector chronicles the collision between Maria Takis, a pregnant tax inspector conducting an audit, and the deeply dysfunctional Catchprice family, whose crumbling car dealership on the outskirts of Sydney becomes the stage for a harrowing unraveling. Peter Carey constructs a world where suburban decay, moral corruption, and desperate human longing converge with visceral intensity, presenting each member of the Catchprice clan as a portrait of fractured identity and suppressed violence. The novel unfolds with a relentless, claustrophobic tension, illustrating how the mundane machinery of bureaucracy can expose the darkest recesses of family life. Carey's prose is razor-sharp and unsentimental, grounding the surreal and grotesque in the gritty textures of contemporary Australian society. A bold and disturbing masterwork, it stands as one of the most powerful examinations of dysfunction, desire, and the corrosive weight of the past in modern Australian literature.
Author: Peter Carey
Format: Hardback
Published: 1992, Alfred A. Knopf
Edition: 1st us trade ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Very good
Jacket: Very good
Pages: Good , price clipped
Markings: Signed
A darkly comic and unsettling work of literary fiction, The Tax Inspector chronicles the collision between Maria Takis, a pregnant tax inspector conducting an audit, and the deeply dysfunctional Catchprice family, whose crumbling car dealership on the outskirts of Sydney becomes the stage for a harrowing unraveling. Peter Carey constructs a world where suburban decay, moral corruption, and desperate human longing converge with visceral intensity, presenting each member of the Catchprice clan as a portrait of fractured identity and suppressed violence. The novel unfolds with a relentless, claustrophobic tension, illustrating how the mundane machinery of bureaucracy can expose the darkest recesses of family life. Carey's prose is razor-sharp and unsentimental, grounding the surreal and grotesque in the gritty textures of contemporary Australian society. A bold and disturbing masterwork, it stands as one of the most powerful examinations of dysfunction, desire, and the corrosive weight of the past in modern Australian literature.