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4.0 out of 5 stars
One to Consume, April 25, 2007
Fat is follows the events of three different people. Grenville is a TV chef with anger management problems who has stacked on the kilograms over the years and is now quite obese, no longer able to find anything other than sport tracksuits on the racks that fit him anymore. One day he decides to do something about this so signs up to his local gym. His treatment and the way he deals with this along with the events following makes for some fun reading. Jeremy Slank fancies himself as a bit of a ladies man, he's very good as his job as a conceptuologist and knows it. The British prime minister has asked him to help market the new Well Farms which are camps that will help the obese get back to normal and stop being a burden on taxpayers. Hayleigh has an eating disorder and is the serious third of this storyline. All storylines ultimately cross at one time or another in what is a very interesting and at times hilarious book. I'll definitely check out other books by this author.
Other similar authors include Max Barry, John O'Farrell and Bill Fitzhugh, check them out as well.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Laugh Out loud funny, August 21, 2008
Maybe Grant writes for a niche audience, but I find his work to be both funny and insightful. His characters are absurd, but the same way that the fellow down the hall at work or the neighbour up the block may well be.. or maybe even we would appear to others if they were viewing us without any of the social barriers we use to protect our privacy. Grant creates an social and political environment where the obese become social pariah, and his novel's three main characters provide some opposing views on the whole concept of body image and (mental) health. The take off on the Tony Blair-ish British PM is bang-on, while the character of the budding bulimic teen was handled with considerable empathy as well as a healthy dose of humour.
I have followed Grant's work, post-"Red Dwarf", and this is his best yet. just be cautious of reading it in a public place, because you will "LOL".
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Weighty Issues, November 22, 2007
Well I couldn't resist the pun!
Fat isn't really SF. It's one of those books that's warning of the ills of following a particular trend in social management to try to warn us about our current situation. It's set in the very near future, a future where being fat isn't illegal, yet, but it's legal to charge for a flight by weight, to charge extra in trains and busses, to discriminate basically because people are fat. All that overweight people hear is that they have to just buck up and lose weight.
Like that's easy.
This is the story of three characters, Grenville Roberts, a chef who has slipped into obese while he wasn't watching, a man having the worst day of his life. Jeremy Slank, a PR man, or as he prefers a Conceptuologist, who has got the job of promoting the Government's new Fat Farms and Hayleigh, a teenager obsessed with food and weight and determined to impress her pop star idol, some day.
Along with these three there's Jemma Bartlet, a research assistant who is the scientific mouthpiece for the author and lust object for Jeremy.
It's a story of how weight could become a bigger issue and how the simplistic views of weight gain and loss are actually damaging. I found Grenville's story to be the most heartbreaking, Grant goes through his morning ritual and the effort he has to put into getting from bed to car. The subsequent visit to the Gym was the trigger for his later irate reaction and you could see how just one more moment of humiliation would put someone over the edge.
It's interesting, funny in places, thought provoking in others but overall it just didn't flow well and sometimes it felt like the author was lecturing to you, the ending also felt rushed and I don't really see much space for a sequel.
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