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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Random House
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB34178798
    ISBN: 9781446484029
    Content: " Victor Mancini has devised a complicated scam to pay for his mother's hospital care: pretend to be choking on a piece of food in a restaurant and the person who 'saves you' will feel responsible for you for the rest of their lives. Multiply that a couple of hundred times and you generate a healthy flow of cheques, week in, week out. Victor also works at a theme park with a motley group of losers, cruises sex addiction groups for action, and visits his mother, whose Alzheimer's disease now hides what may be the startling truth about his parentage."
    Content: Rezension(1): " Chuck Palahniuk is the bestselling author of fifteen fictional works, including Fight Club , Invisible Monsters , Survivor , Choke , Lullaby , Diary , Haunted , Rant , Pygmy , Tell-All , Damned , Doomed , Beautiful You , and most recently Make Something Up . He lives in the Pacific Northwest." Rezension(2): "New York Times:A raw and vital book, punctuated with outrageous, off-the-wall moments" Rezension(3): "Literary Review:A wonderful writer with a raw take on modern woes" Rezension(4): "〈a href=http://www.publishersweekly.com target=blank〉〈img src=https://images.contentreserve.com/pw_logo.png alt=Publisher's Weekly border=0 /〉〈/a〉: July 7, 2003 While it', always interesting to hear authors read their own work, this production is not likely to prompt a narrating career for Palahniuk ( Fight Club ) on par with his literary accomplishments. That', not to say, however, that his style doesn', work with this offbeat story of a sex-addicted medical school dropout whose gift is pretending to choke in restaurants and reaping the sympathy checks of the people who ",ave",him in order to pay for the care of his sick mother. Palahniuk reads with a husky, occasionally whiny voice that', rushed and intense. At times it seems like he', not reading at all, but reciting the novel from memory as he paces the floor with a cup of coffee in one hand and the fingers of the other pressed to his forehead while a cigarette smolders away in the ashtray. He brings a unique sensibility and opts for inflections that other narrators probably would not. After the book implores listeners to turn away and go no further in Chapter 1, for instance, Palahniuk reads the words ",hapter 2",in a tone of voice that says, ",K, you asked for it.",That', a fitting sentiment for those who choose to listen, as this bizarre story is by turns hilarious and depressing, read in an idiosyncratic manner by an idiosyncratic author. Based on the Doubleday hardcover (Forecasts, Apr. 2, 2001). " Rezension(5): "〈a href=http://www.publishersweekly.com target=blank〉〈img src=https://images.contentreserve.com/pw_logo.png alt=Publisher's Weekly border=0 /〉〈/a〉: April 2, 2001 Palahniuk ( Fight Club , Invisible Monsters ) once again demonstrates his faith in the credo that before things get better, they must get much, much worse. Like previous Palahniuk protagonists, Victor Mancini is young and prematurely cynical, a med school dropout whose eerily detached narration of the banal horrors of everyday existence gives way to a numbed account of nihilistic carnage. Cruising sex-addict meetings for action, Victor enjoys bathroom trysts with nymphomaniacs on short prison furloughs, focused on maximizing his sexual highs. During the working day, he is trapped in a 1734 colonial theme park, where the entire self-medicated staff blearily endures abusive school tours while hiding out from the world. Victor supports his mother, who is in the hospital, stricken with Alzheimer',,she is wasting away, and despite the misery she put him through in childhood (revealed in an increasingly horrific series of flashbacks), he wants to be a good boy and take care of her. This becomes challenging when Victor is seduced by a strange hospital worker calling herself Dr. Marshall, who shows him his mother', diary,it describes her self-impregnation by a holy relic she believes to be the foreskin of Jesus. This has a profound effect on Victor, who is stunned by the possibility that there may be some good in him after all. Victor is even more pathetic than Palahniuk', previous antiheroes, in that the world he creates for himself (a carnivalesque mé,ange of theme park, geriatric ward and asylum) is actually more horrific than the one he seeks to escape. Still, the novel showcases the author', powers of description, character development and attention-getting dialogue handily enough to give this dark meditation on addiction a distinctive and humorous twist. Author tour. "
    Language: English
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