The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon

Contemporary fiction · 2003

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time review

by Mark Haddon

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The verdict

Christopher John Francis Boone is fifteen years old, knows all the prime numbers up to 7,057, and has decided to investigate who killed his neighbor's dog with a garden fork.

Best for curious readers in the genre. Reading time: 4h 15m.

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon

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What it argues

Christopher John Francis Boone is fifteen years old, knows all the prime numbers up to 7,057, and has decided to investigate who killed his neighbor's dog with a garden fork. The resulting detective story takes him — and the reader — on an increasingly high-stakes journey that begins in the quiet streets of Swindon and ends with Christopher alone on a train to London, doing something that terrifies him in ways that no math problem ever could.

What makes the novel unusual is its narrator. Christopher tells the story in a voice that is logical, literal, precise, and consistently missing the emotional register that most narrators use. Mark Haddon never labels Christopher's condition in the text — the novel's original paperback edition did use "Asperger's" on the jacket but the word never appears inside — and the effect is that the reader gradually understands Christopher through the way he sees the world rather than through any diagnostic category. What looks at first like an eccentric detective story reveals itself as a novel about what it means to live in a mind that processes the world differently from most people around you.

What it gets right

  1. 1.

    Restricting narration to a single, highly specific perspective — one that cannot perceive or report emotional context — forces readers to do interpretive work that is unusually active and rewarding.

  2. 2.

    Christopher is not a stereotype of neurodivergence; he is a fully specific person, and the novel is careful to show both what his way of thinking enables and what it costs him.

  3. 3.

    The mystery structure is a delivery mechanism — the real discovery is not who killed the dog but what Christopher's parents have been hiding, which is a more ordinary and more devastating kind of crime.

What it covers

Who wrote it

Mark Haddon is a British novelist, poet, and children's book author. Before The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (2003) he wrote extensively for children's television and illustrated picture books. The Curious Incident was his debut adult novel and became one of the bestselling British novels of the 2000s, winning the Whitbread Book Award and the Commonwealth Writers' Prize among others. It was adapted into a highly successful West End stage production that won seven Olivier Awards. His subsequent novels include A Spot of Bother and The Red House.

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