When Walker Percy penned these prophetic words in his foreword to
the first edition of A Confederacy of Dunces, he could not have
known just how wide Toole''s "world of readers" would become.
Released by Louisiana State University Press in April 1980, A
Confederacy of Dunces is nothing short of a publishing phenomenon.
Turned down by countless publishers and submitted by the author''s
mother years after his suicide, the book won the 1981 Pulitzer
Prize for Fiction. Today, there are over 1,500,000 copies in print
worldwide in eighteen languages.
Toole''s lunatic and sage novel introduces one of the most
memorable characters in American literature, Ignatius Reilly, whom
Percy dubs "slob extraordinary, a mad Oliver Hardy, a fat Don
Quixote, a perverse Thomas Aquinas rolled into one -- who is in
violent revolt against the entire modern age". Ignatius'' ire
explodes when his mother backs her car into another automobile. The
owner of the damaged vehicle insists on payment; Mrs. Reilly
demands that her son cease watching television and writing in his
Big Chief tablet and get a job.
Set in New Orleans, A Confederacy of Dunces outswifts Swift, one
of whose essays gives the book its title. As its characters burst
into life, they leave the region and literature forever changed by
their presences -- Ignatius and his mother; Miss Trixie, the
octogenarian assistant accountant at Levy Pants; inept, wan
Patrolman Mancuso; Darlene, the Bourbon Street stripper with a
penchant for poultry; Jones, the jivecat in space-age dark glasses.
Satire and farce animate A Confederacy of Dunces; tragic awareness
ennobles it.
Louisiana State University Press celebrates A Confederacy of
Dunces'' twentieth year withthis anniversary edition, which
includes a new introduction by Andrei Codrescu that examines the
relationship of this modern-day classic to the city whose pulse it
so brilliantly captures.