God's Dog

Diego Marani

God's Dog
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Text Publishing Co
Country
Australia
Published
2 January 2014
Pages
176
ISBN
9781922147714

God’s Dog

Diego Marani

Set in a not-too-distant future, and moving between Rome and Amsterdam, God’s Dog is a detective novel unlike any you have read before.

It is the eve of Pope Benedict XVIII’s canonisation and Domingo Salazar, a Haitian orphan and now a Vatican secret agent, is hellbent on defeating the Angels of Death, pro-abortion and pro-euthanasia dissidents who are undermining the Pope’s authority. But as Salazar closes in on the cell he finds his life turned upside down.

Suddenly it is Salazar and his closest friend Guntur who are under suspicion of sabotaging the administration. Their concept for a globalised religion called Bible-Koranism has upset the Church and they are in grave danger, as is Guntur’s infamous Swahili-speaking chimpanzee Django.

God’s Dog is a spoof on the absurdities of institutionalised religion that will delight aficionados of thrillers and detective novels as well as fans of Diego Marani.

Review

God’s Dog is a rare kind of literary detective novel: thrilling, hard-boiled and action-packed, with beautiful imagery and compelling insights into religion, science and philosophy. It’s also a uniquely Italian take on the dystopian genre, a relief after the flood from the Anglosphere. Reading translated novels is always a slightly unnerving experience, but as Italian author Diego Marani’s novel New Finnish Grammar was also translated by Judith Landry and won the Oxford-Weidenfeld Translation Prize in 2012, you can trust that you’re in good hands.

After surviving the 2010 Haiti earthquake as a child, Marani’s protagonist Domingo Salazar grew up in Italy within Catholic institutions. He’s now a policeman who upholds the ‘laws of our Holy Mother Church’: Italy is a theocracy and Salazar is ‘God’s dog’. His mission, given to him in a confessional by an elderly vicar, is to capture an abortionist doctor who is likely to commit the serious crime of euthanasia while visiting his terminally ill father. Salazar is also instructed to help foil whatever nefarious plans the Free Death Brigade have for the upcoming canonisation of Pope Benedict XVIII.

Although happy to follow these orders, Salazar is a complex man with complex ideas. While living in Holland, he’s been secretly building a movement called Bible-Koranism, ‘the new frontier of globalised faith’. This lands him and his ally Gunter in hot water with his Church superiors, threatening their lives even as Salazar continues to carry out what he sees as God’s work. To further complicate matters, Guntur is a neuro-psychiatrist who has taught a chimpanzee how to speak Swahili, posing a threat to Church doctrine.

Interviewed late last year by Samuel Rutter for Readings, Marani spoke of writing ‘the second adventure of an imaginary Vatican detective, Domingo Salazar … His first adventure was published in June and provoked quite a wave of criticism from the Catholic establishment. I’m looking for more!’ Anyone who reads God’s Dog will be eagerly anticipating more Salazar.


Kate Goldsworthy is a freelance reviewer.

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