
Louis CK’s ‘Ingram’: Skilled comic spews self-indulgent self-abuse
Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images
A gripping tale
To compound matters, “Ingram,” isn’t just a story of exploration, but also one of self-exploration, in the most literal and least appealing sense. There’s a staggering amount of masturbation. C.K. doesn’t so much write about shame as relive it, page after sticky page. His public fall from grace plays out again and again, only now under the pretense of art. It’s less confession than repetition — self-absolution by way of self-abuse, and somehow still not funny.
Any comparisons to writers like Bukowski or Barry Hannah are little more than wishful thinking. Bukowski was grimy, but in a graceful way. He wrote filth with style, turning hangovers into hymns.
Hannah’s madness had a tune to it, strange but unmistakably his own. Even Hunter S. Thompson, at his most incoherent, had velocity. His sentences tore through the page, drug-fueled but deliberate.
C.K.’s writing has none of that. He tries to channel Americana — the heat, the highways, the hard men who dream of escape — but his clumsy prose ensures the only thing channeled is confusion. As C.K. recently told Bill Maher, he did no research for the book, and that much is evident from the first page. His characters talk like they were written by a man who’s only seen Texas through “No Country for Old Men.”
Don’t quit your day job
In the history of American letters, many great writers have fallen. Hemingway drank himself into oblivion; Mailer stabbed his wife; Capote drowned in his own decadence. But their sentences still stood. Their craft was the redemption. With “Ingram,” C.K. has no such refuge. The book exposes the limits of confession as art — that point where self-exposure turns into self-immolation. It could have been great; instead, it’s the very opposite. The only thing it proves is that writing and performing are different callings. Comedy forgives indiscipline. Literature doesn’t.
The great American novel has survived worse assaults — from bored professors, from self-serious minimalists, from MFA factories that mistake verbosity for vision. But rarely has it been dragged so low by someone so convinced of his brilliance. There’s perverse poetry in it, though. A man who was caught with his pants down now delivers a novel that never pulls them back up.
You may also like
By mfnnews
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- Finally: Vaccine guidelines that make sense for parents January 12, 2026
- Comedian infiltrates Dearborn, Michigan — and the stories he returns with are WILD January 12, 2026
- Blackpink Lisa features in Thailand’s tourism campaign teaser video January 12, 2026
- ‘P77″ lands No. 2 on Prime Video Top 10 Movies in the Philippines January 12, 2026
- Andrea del Rosario says she’s a fan of Sexbomb Girls, hopes for Viva Hot Babes reunion January 12, 2026
- PVL: Galeries Tower acquires Aiza Maizo-Pontillas in major roster shakeup January 12, 2026
- Italian tenor Bocelli to sing at Milano Cortina Winter Olympics opening ceremony January 12, 2026







Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.