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Reviewed by Alysha Allen for Readers' Favorite
The Last Eucharist: A True War Story, set in the quotidian town of Jackrabbit, Arizona, features an amputee Vietnam veteran, Thomas, who earns his meager living doing headstands for the sneering common masses outside of a theatre. While Thomas spends his earnings from these "atrocity exhibitions" upon McDonald's flatulence-inducing fast food, he encounters Sally, a beautiful blond female, who seems intent to befriend him and be his savior despite his repulsive appearance, foul bowel odors and violent temper. Ian King's Eucharist travels with chronological and geographical disjunction through Thomas's psycho-traumatic Vietnam war memories to connect these to Sally's serendipitous discoveries in Vietnam's postwar destitution amidst an orphanage of crippled children and a thieving Amerasian invalid. Intrinsic within these Tarantinoesque random events is a brief glimpse into the elusive, beauteous connectedness of life when not followed soon after by the inevitable disruption of meaninglessness to our bittersweet fantasies of existence.
As a secularist, my initial response to The Last Eucharist was one of disinterest. But, in the words of Dr. Frank-n-Furter, one should not "judge a book by its cover" (nor its title). And indeed, I was infinitely rewarded by my adherence to that worn-out adage. Although The Last Eucharist is Ian King's first novel, its finely-turned phrases of acerbic wit and sardonic, fun-poking insight into humanity's gloomy brutality merits superiority over the vast majority of other indie novels and even deserves acclaim amongst the echelons of best-selling fiction. For, in the midst of reader-coddling authors, King writes a no-holds-barred depiction of life's loathsome dirtiness and utter meaninglessness with an ending which underscores that message with refined dark humor. Certainly, this novel will not be for all, as it requires, like the narrator, a well-developed cynicism as well as a keen perspicacity to laugh at a joke superbly told.