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6 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Attempts to dignify absurdity,
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This review is from: The Good Humor Man: Or, Calorie 3501 (Paperback)
I'm a really big fan of satire and irreverent humor. "Fat White Vampire Blues" by 'Andrew Fox' was a delight to read. "Bride of Fat White Vampire Blues" was like running through quicksand. "The Good Humor Man" attempts to dignify absurdity. There is no doubt that Andrew Fox is a very talented and witty individual. But it is time for him to write more with the reader in mind than his peers.
This was a Dan Brown plot twist, David Lynch perversion, Wizard of Oz journey novel. In the end it leaves the reader wondering if there were one or two moments of entertainment experienced, I remember one. Fox spent too much time on expounding on all the 'science fiction' parts to impress his friends, "Hey, look at me, I'm smart." Unfortunately, his characters lack any believability and thus your compassion. Situations are not fleshed out in any credible way and the reader will feel he is hurried from one just to get to another plot twist. How could anyone identify with a couple where one got pleasure from performing liposuction and the other pleasure from getting fat in order to have it sucked out? That was not the one moment of entertainment that I experienced.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Elvis, cheese, liposuction and the Hall of Presidents.,
This review is from: The Good Humor Man: Or, Calorie 3501 (Paperback)
If Hunter Thompson and Ray Bradbury had a secret love child, Andrew Fox would've been it, and this book the testament to that wild night of love.
What else do you need to know? Food has become the disease; elderly plastic surgeons are the cure, and Elvis may be the key to humanity's future. You may be scratching your head, which is good, because the only way to relieve that curiosity, is to read this highly engaging and unique vision by Mr. Fox. Pick up this book, and you won't be disappointed. You might even go on a diet.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Good Humor Man hits close to home,
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This review is from: The Good Humor Man: Or, Calorie 3501 (Paperback)
Fox creates yet another novel so easy to read and hard to put down it's like candy. There are some big messages here underlying the sci-fi and humor, about agribusiness and health. Definitely a worthwhile read!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful book!,
By
This review is from: The Good Humor Man: Or, Calorie 3501 (Paperback)
On the surface this is a whiz-bang science fiction story filled with mad scientists, car chases, shady foreign nationals, illegal plastic surgery, homicidal Elvis impersonators, gun battles, and at least one truck full of burning cheese. The characters are well-developed and there are enough "holy crap" plot twists to keep you turning pages well past your regular bedtime. It's also a vision of the future so grim and so easily believable that it scares the hell out of me. The threads that Fox has used to weave together this tapestry of economic apocalypse, social oppression, and scientific hubris are clearly visible in today's culture. The underlying message seems to me to be, "Hey folks, let's ease up on the fat people. We may need that biodiversity again someday. In fact, it may be the fat who'll inherit the Earth rather than the meek." So, pass me another of those fried peanut butter and banana sandwiches, then go and get your hands on a copy of this book.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Great Novel with a So-So Cover,
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This review is from: The Good Humor Man: Or, Calorie 3501 (Paperback)
In the tradition of John Brunner and Phillip K. Dick, Andrew Fox has created a world in 2041 where the health food trend today has been taken to an extreme in a sly novel that nonetheless takes itself seriously. He develops flawed characters whom you care about, battling over ludicrous items, such as a jar of Elvis' fat, which will oddly make sense to the reader. Even the lesser characters get their humanity. Having read Fox's first two novels before this, I'm continually amazed at the uniqueness of his worlds and his characters, and how they stick in my mind long after I've finished reading.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic! I love this author's work.,
This review is from: The Good Humor Man: Or, Calorie 3501 (Paperback)
This is a unique work, and in our generic world, that is a tremendous compliment. I've been meaning to write this review for a while, but what spurred me on just now was learning THE GOOD HUMOR MAN has just been chosen by BOOKLIST (the American Library Association's journal of reviews) for one of the ten best SF/Fantasy novels of 2010! It totally deserves this. To throw my two-cents of authorial analogues, I'd say a combination of Joseph Conrad and Franz Kafka with a soupcon of Orwell (and for two-cents more I'll say that I liked the cover.)
I've also read Fox's vampire novels, and adored them. I read the first while in the midst of a bad break-up, but in Jules Duchon (hero (or antihero) of both novels) I found a pal I wanted to be with who helped ease the pain with his companionship. Andrew Fox is an author I'll read again, any time. |
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The Good Humor Man: Or, Calorie 3501 by Andrew Fox (Paperback - April 15, 2009)
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