![Am I Cold](https://www.irishtimes.com/resizer/v2/274D4ZI5ZE6D5GGSP7T2YIYAJA.jpg?smart=true&auth=eb0db6334005f87a981870a5bf21c97a8cd8a5469e72f0a23f0d87f099a24547&width=105)
Jaded, nasty men living nihilistic lives in dark European cities, recounting their unenjoyable-sounding sex with women they disdain, has been a theme in cutting-edge fiction. The vaguely Houellebecqian opening to Martin Kongstad's first novel slips easily into this vein, but Kongstad has too much to say to persist with it; he laughs at it. Breathtakingly explicit, Am I Cold is a satire crammed with repugnant personalities. It's hard to understand how Martin Aitken has managed such a rapid-fire, acid-tongued translation, a tall order in the context of a Danish bacchanal of art, design and drunken dinners. Offensive and funny, it is oddly beautiful on friendship. A sacked restaurant critic is our narrator as he eschews monogamy and the "good" life in Copenhagen as the crash of 2008 looms; the sum is so much greater than its parts.