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Victims (Little House on the Bowery)
 
 
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Victims (Little House on the Bowery) [Paperback]

Travis Jeppesen (Author)
1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Little House on the Bowery May 1, 2003

"Victims may by the most exciting first novel I’ve read in a decade or more. This is a brilliant, haunting, and, strangest of all, very funny novel."—Dennis Cooper, -author of Frisk

Victims is a novel about the final days of a religious cult called The Overcomers. Like the infamous Heaven’s Gate cult, whose mass suicide gained world media attention in the 1990s, they are a small group of lost souls guided by the teachings of a charismatic leader, Martin Jones. The Overcomers go about their lives preparing for the cosmic event that will signal the end of their time on earth. Their struggles to reconcile their faith in Jones’s teachings with the emotional ups and downs of their relationships, jobs and interactions with the natural world form the subject of this exquisitely written and highly original novel.

Based on extensive research into the rhetoric of religious cults, Victims is a novel of ideas. Twenty-three-year-old author Travis Jeppesen uses an episodic narrative, an elegantly direct style and a quirky, sympathetic group of characters to ponder a question raised by Jones’s teachings: If friendship and love are just systems to instill -comfort in our lives, are all human interactions acts of manipulation?

Victims is set in a rural America of the imagination informed by classic American values—and cleansed of the mundane distractions that characterize American culture. Travis Jeppesen has written a novel with a philosophical bravura rarely seen in the work of contemporary American writers.

Travis Jeppesen was born in Ft. Lauderdale in 1979. His fiction and cultural criticism have appeared in Book Forum, 3am Magazine, The Stranger and other publications, and he is a contributing editor to Pavement Magazine. Victims is his first novel. Jeppesen currently resides in an undisclosed Eastern European country.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Delving desultorily into the psyches of the members of a small cult, Jeppesen strives for apocalyptic resonance in this wobbly first novel. In brief, fragmentary chapters, the writer introduces his motley cast of disaffected characters, most seduced in some way by the teachings of Martin Jones, Earth's Representative from the Next Level of Existence. Jones's cult, a Heaven's Gate-like outfit, is housed in a former elementary school in the imaginary rural community of Buick. Herbert, the most frequently recurring figure, tests the patience even of his fellow cult members, indulging all sorts of unpleasant urges (near the start of the book, he slaughters a goat and eats its raw entrails) and eventually striking off on his own and meeting up with two loner freaks, Howard ("a dumbfuck and a failure") and Ruphis ("a grade A low-life"). In a series of faux-Beckettian scenes, the three eke out their idle existences ("What if Herbert is not only looking at Ruphis and Howard, but down at the table as well? It's not out of the question, no"). More sympathetic is Tanya, a troubled teen whose boyfriend commits suicide soon after she finds out she's pregnant, driving her into the clutches of Martin Jones. Jones's teachings are strictly generic-he believes that the earth is being "recycled" and that his followers need to leave (via a mass suicide). Still, Jeppesen might have revealed something about the twisted logic of cult faith if he hadn't succumbed to the temptation of garbled, pseudo-experimentalist prose ("a life faring sexless as the hairs of a day"; "lifting his fork in advance of a forthcoming display of fantastic implication"). The pretentious sloppiness of the writing obscures a genuine narrative vigor, which shines through in isolated episodes.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

". . . [B]oldly strange, funny . . ." -- THE ADVOCATE, June 24, 2003

"An artfully fractured vision of memory & escape, Victims maintains a rigorous structure throughout-- even when the aliens show up." -- THE VILLAGE VOICE, June 4-10, 2003

"Jeppesen structures his slender narrative as a bold mosaic of POV-switching fragments, told in lanugage either raw or florid." -- ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

"Like Cooper, Jeppesen has a gift for balancing accessibility with lyricism, & the laconic speech of teenagers with philosophical density." -- PUNK PLANET MAGAZINE, Oct. 2003

"This book marks the debut of an author who will surely become a major voice in alternative literary fiction . . ." -- Library Journal (starred review)

"Victims may be the most exciting first novel I've read in a decade or more." -- Dennis Cooper (author of Frisk)

"[T]he best debut novel I've read in a long time. Jeppesen's prose is stunning in its originality and power." -- BOOKSLUT.COM, Aug. 7, 2003

Product Details

  • Paperback: 200 pages
  • Publisher: Akashic Books (May 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1888451424
  • ISBN-13: 978-1888451429
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.3 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #667,087 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
1.8 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Tedious Drivel, June 4, 2003
This review is from: Victims (Little House on the Bowery) (Paperback)
I always try to finish a book once I've started it, but "Victims" was certainly a chore. It's a vapid exercise in pretension, ovewritten in a style that verges on the purple and that sheds absolutely no light on its subject, cults, or on literature in general. Yet no sooner had I forced myself to finish it than I read a very positive review comparing it to Henry Darger and Adolf Wolfi. Puh-leese! These guys had some substance to them. And they'd never have the gall to say in their author bio, as Jeppesen does, that they live in an "undisclosed" Eastern European country. I can't see the point in keeping this information undisclosed apart from Jeppesen trying to give himself a mysterious aura that his text fails to do. So the positive review baffled me, until I came to the end of it and saw that the reviewer also reviewed (also positively) Dennis Cooper's twaddle, and Cooper is the editor of the series that "Victims" is a part of. Hmmmm. Very interesting. Is there some sort of connection here?
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a beautiful adventure, May 11, 2003
By 
jim carter (Monterey, California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Victims (Little House on the Bowery) (Paperback)
I just finished reading Victims. It deserves a lot better than a slash and burn job by someone blinded by hatred for Dennis Cooper. This is very unusual and interesting and compelling novel. Jeppesen is a lyrical and ambitious writer and I was entranced by his strange world full of vivid feelings and inspired ideas about belief and self. I highly recommend it to readers who long for novels that do more than follow the rules. I don't see the comparison to Cooper's books at all. Victims is something very different and special.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Like watching your ten year old niece butcher Fur Elise, August 14, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Victims (Little House on the Bowery) (Paperback)
Unlike most of the customer reviewers, I don't have strong feelings for or against Dennis Cooper -- I read _Try_, and I liked it, but haven't read anything else by him. With that preface, I have to say I agree with most of the other reviewers -- this painfully bad book is a waste of pretentious hot air, which Jeppesen seems to have no shortage of. He's tried to inflate a shoddy narrative structure and horrendous prose with "philosophy" and "ideas", but it just comes across as another one of those painfully cute (in a condescending way), kiddie attempts at being grownup, like when your neice butchers Fur Elise at her third grade recital. Sadly, most of us outgrow this phase before the end of our teens; Jeppesen apparently has been able to live out this extended adolescence thanks to an indulgent publisher. His interview on the publisher's website is a gem ... Here's a teaser:
"Without intending to, I ended up writing this book against the reader, to a large extent, at least to the reader who comes to this book with any preconceived notions of what a novel is supposed to be. This is why it is immensely gratifying for me, on a purely egotistical level, when readers have a negative reaction to this book; it merely confirms everything I suspected! I'd much rather people hate this book than like it. If people like it, that means it fails. Then again, failure is a lot more interesting than success . . . "

Then, ummm ... I guess it's a smashing success, Jeppesen! Congrats!

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Next Level, Martin Jones, Jesus Christ, Kingdom of Heaven, Buick Elementary School, Kingdom of Eternity, Men In White
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Surprise Me!
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