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Straight Razor (Black Ice Books)
 
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Straight Razor (Black Ice Books) [Paperback]

Harold Jaffe (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Black Ice Books September 15, 1995
Twelve stories with the precision of a laser and the charge of a land mine.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 132 pages
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press; 1 edition (September 15, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1573660019
  • ISBN-13: 978-1573660013
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 4.5 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,670,028 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jaffe -- Madman or Media "Anchor-droid"?, January 26, 2002
By 
This review is from: Straight Razor (Black Ice Books) (Paperback)
...He is a product of his times - or perhaps an anti-product. He looks at the dominant culture that surrounds him, and he is mostly disturbed by it. Disturbed by the dehumanizing effects of mandatory technology. Will the Luddites in the audience without a cell phone please raise their hands? Disturbed by the wholesale abuse and slaughter of people and animals. Disturbed by media anchordroids who mindlessly spew the party line. And what is the party line? This above all: To thine own corporate parents be true. Consume. This is what it means to be American. If you want to belong, you better buy a GM and Keep America Rolling. Do your part. Fork over your meager earnings from your cubicle job so that you may affirm your patriotism. If you love your country, you will support its corporate entities. Because you are either with Us or you are with the Terrorists. In this time in particular, dissention is not allowed. Certainly you have the right to free speech, as long as you say the right thing.

Harold Jaffe doesn't say the right thing...everyone's [ticked] off...

Why does he do this? He likes animals; why doesn't he just write Call of the Wild II?

He does it because he can't help it. You see, "If you have love enough, then go on, rage, rage out of love." And Jaffe loves enough. And so he rages. He rages against a society he finds largely unsupportable, bloated, greedy, ravenous, jealous, demanding, hypocritical, entrenched, bulletproof, painted with hypnotic DAY-GLO colors.

Jaffe uses the same tactics as the media-frenzy culture we live in. He writes with a merciless efficiency and swiftness. He intrudes upon us with unidentified, disembodied voices, like in "Necro," parroting the in-your-face media fixation and regurgitation of warped "reality" programming. He doesn't linger on any aspect of his story for too long. He lights from flower to flower. Fast, list-like stories like "Carjack," "14 Ways of Looking at a Serial Killer," and "Things to do During Times of War" echo the need for the national attention-span to please not be stressed for anything longer than what would normally be broken, mediated, by a Word from Our Sponsors...Many readers would turn their ire back upon the author. But Jaffe's provocations are intentional. He's trying to get the reader stirred up, and then, hopefully, to examine this agitation and seek its actual source - the culture we live in, for that, in so many ways, is what is insupportable...

Jaffe seeks to get us riled up, but unlike most fiction, he does not allow resolution, satisfaction, gratification. If we seek release, we must look within ourselves, examine our own thoughts, our own responses, our own reactions.

Jaffe's tales are so extreme, so hyperreal, because such extremity is necessary to disassociate the reader from such an intense media-saturated culture, thereby eliciting a state of mind where it becomes possible to examine the network while standing outside the network, instead of being asleep inside the network.

Unlike satire, which establishes a norm and then ricochets against it, Jaffe uses pastiche, in which culture is unflinchingly mimicked, broadcasting every contradictory datum, commenting on the absurdity of it all by providing no established foundation of normalcy; we are instead left to flounder in a wicked distillation of our everyday world, an experience so intense that we shudder, suddenly awakened to the sewage with which we are daily subsumed.

The most important message Harold Jaffe leaves us with is not one of his fictions, but in fact a Public Service Announcement he created for NBC's "The more you know" pre-advertisement segment. In it, Jaffe brilliantly explains to children and adolescents that sex is deadly. With equal deftness, he illustrates that commercial sex is very healthy. "Let the Corporations be your guide," Jaffe croons while plucking his banjo...

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cutting into the Body Politic, June 28, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Straight Razor (Black Ice Books) (Paperback)
I'm a Jaffe enthusiast: I admit it. I read whatever he writes, and Straight Razor is him at his best: an uncanny series of innovative stories with perfect pitch dialogue and extraordinary passion--both personal and political.
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