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Take Five

Preface by John O'Brien

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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.

Reviews

Press 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
The story of a public life force who loses, one by one, his five senses, and pratfalls brutally through a dark comic night of the soul. Here's an unpredictably tough and funny affirmation of life as it comes.

Kirkus
It's funny, laugh-out-loud funny . . . even if Mano-vian humor continues to be off-limits for those unsettled by sex jokes, Jesus jokes, ethnic jokes, or scatology . . . If you're not easily offended, you'll be easily, repeatedly blasted into fits of shamefaced laughter.

Wall Street Journal
He has the charm of Don Rickles raised to the 10th power.

New York Review of Books
Take Five is hilarious, even when it is vile. This is a difficult, astonishing, almost wicked gospel.

New York Times Book Review
In stylistic richness and scenic ingenuity, in its fetid exuberance (recalling Lenny Bruce at best and worst), in its 'post-Christian' grapplings and despair, Take Five bounds away from its predecessors.

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