Take Five
Preface by John O'Brien
Welcome to the world of Simon Lynxx and to one of the great overlooked novels of the 1980s. Con-man, filmmaker (currently working on producing "Jesus 2001", what he calls the religious equivalent of The Godfather, best known for his movie "The Clap That Took Over the World"), descendent of a wealthy and prestigious New York family whose wealth and prestige are on a sharp decline, racist and anti-Semite (though Simon dislikes all ethnic groups equally), possessor of never-satisfied appetites (food, women, drink, but most of all, money and more money), and the fastest talker since Falstaff, Simon is on a quest that goes backwards. Through the course of this 600-page novel, Simon loses, one by one, all of his senses (taste is lost when trying to siphon off gasoline for his roving, broken-down production van), ending in a state of complete debilitation in which he is being made ready for eternity and salvation. As energy packed as a William Gaddis novel and as rich in language as a Shakespearean play, Take Five is a modern masterpiece that is at once a celebration of life and a morality play on excess, as though anticipating the self-indulgent "me generation" of the decade.
Details
ISBN-10
1-56478-193-3
ISBN-13
9781564781932
Publication Date
Sep 1998
Nb of pages
608
Dimensions 6 x 9 in.
ReviewsPress Reviews
New York Times
It is as if James Joyce, for his sins, had been forced to grow up in Queens; as if Sam Beckett had been mugged by Godot in a Flushing comfort station; as if Sid Caesar played the part of Moby Dick in
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National Review
Entertaining as a manic zoo . . . Reading through the brilliant surface requires that you busy another part of your mind with deciphering what is happening, yet another with keeping track. Once you
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Library Journal
Kirkus
New York Review of Books
New York Times Book Review WE ALSO SUGGEST
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