The Failure
A Novel
-
- ¥1,600
-
- ¥1,600
発行者による作品情報
A tale of a slacker, an MIT professor, and a heist: "A writer of considerable talent whose techniques, tropes, and wordplay recall Thomas Pynchon" (Booklist).
Set in Los Angeles, this novel tells the story of a sibling rivalry, a get-rich-quick scheme, and two guys who conceive and badly execute a plan to rob a Korean check-cashing store in order to finance the prototype for an impossibly ridiculous Internet application.
"I defy anyone to come up with an equation to explain how this book's first impression as a ridiculously clever, funny crime story can gradually disclose a metanovel built from far more encyclopedic scratch only to reveal upon its conclusion a central, overriding thought so heartfelt literally it trembles your lower lip. This is one stunning piece of work." —Dennis Cooper, author of The Marbled Swarm
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A robbery goes awry for a young L.A. slacker on a get-rich-quick scheme in Greer's cleverly fashioned, flimsy second novel (after Artificial Light). Protagonist Guy Forget wants his square MIT professor brother, Marcus, to lend him the $50,000 he needs to build the prototype for his invention, a sophisticated information-mining computer system called Pandemonium, which will transform Guy into "a man with clout." But Marcus can't stand his brother and is still in competition with him for the approval of their father. Then Dad suddenly dies, and leaves Guy the exact amount he needs, but it's too late to stop "Plan Charlie," Guy's harebrained plot to rob a Korean check-cashing service along with his dog-walker friend, Billy. The other characters getting in Guy's way are his manipulative femme fatale new girlfriend, Violet, and her scheming jealous pursuer, Sven Transvoort. Greer creates emotional distance by cutting up the sequence of events so that chapters are not chronological and inserting self-conscious comments by the "not entirely omniscient but very reliable narrator." Running gags render this suspense parody cheeky, experimentally cool, and not terrifically memorable.