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The Franchiser

door Stanley Elkin

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1643167,368 (3.79)10
The comic story of a man's obsessive quest to build a fast food empire across America For the better part of the 1970s, entrepreneur Ben Flesh could expand his business kingdom with the snap of his fingers. His fast food restaurants and electronics stores were all a part of his rapidly growing domain, remaking America one enterprise at a time. But when a series of personal and professional catastrophes strike unexpectedly, Ben finds himself on the verge of losing it all.   Hailed as one of Stanley Elkin's greatest works, The Franchiser is a biting satire of American consumerism and the story of one man's all-consuming determination to create his lasting legacy, one business at a time.   This ebook features rare photos and never-before-seen documents from the author's estate and from the Stanley Elkin archives at Washington University in St. Louis.… (meer)
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Toon 3 van 3
I guess I don't need to read about another 1%er who helped make the united states the messed-up place it is today. ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
Verbal diarhea in some parts, but a stunning example of what can be done with the English language in others. ( )
  rendier | Dec 20, 2020 |
A few lines are spoken deep in the Franchiser where the course of events suddenly shift, the novel’s focus jolts away towards being more than just a self-conscious, slightly corny satire of the golden-arch homogenization of small-town-big-city America. Ben Flesh, Elkin’s hero and franchisee, is suddenly faced with an impending multiply-sclerotic powerlessness that bounds back and forth, grows and subsides through the rest of the novel—the scope of the novel no longer space wasted on been-there-done-that social commentary but deliriously depressing and impacting tragicomedy, well worth its place on McCaffery’s 20th-century best-of.

[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]

Ben Flesh’s anxious breakdown shifts between surreal comedy and genuine heartbreak. The twins, the triplets, all their bizarre health disorders, humourous but fucking damning and you know it. Between all the silly ha-has we get from the uncontrollably prejudiced (“It’s like a disease.”), the chronically constipated, &c., we’re still left waiting for the page they begin dropping like flies. And Flesh’s life takes a turn following a retrobulbar optic neuritis and an accompanying suggestion—an experience shared in dangerous detail to the reader as it was felt by Elkin himself outside of his writing—his Everyman Walt Disney is, in the flesh, powerless, and it’s pretty heartbreaking at times, especially having witnessed this struggle with a similarly-crippling disease affecting a loved one, the powerlessness derived just as crushing both personally and socially.

Standing out: It’s impossible to forget the surreality of the imposter Colonel Sanders (“finger-lickin’ good!”—DUH! wudyooespect?), the dropping of those beloved flies interspersed too casually with Ben Flesh’s failing Travel Inn—his final franchise!—, the discovery of sexual deviancy sweeping the nation—honestly, the whole ending, the last 50 pages in their entirety: Brilliant. Delivery made comedy upsetting; it’s, like, uhm, too deadpan and matter-of-fact when things get absurd and poetically rich and then, ahh! there’s more failure in the Flesh and—seriously?—excruciating descriptions of hotel room furnishings. Dang. It hurts, it had too much an impact, a physical punch to them there guts, and it came with such a buildup! from slow and steady (and maybe—an aside—a little bit tiring-slash-boring) to rock-‘em-friggin'-sock’em.

From what I’ve read, powerlessness and its impacts are Elkin’s forte; coming close to death but never quite reaching it, it’s always impending, threatening and real for his heroes and heroines. Keeps me interested, and I’ll be checking out more from Elkin in the future, starting with the sickly Magic Kingdom. Ahh, ahh!

[94] ( )
4 stem tootstorm | Jan 11, 2013 |
Toon 3 van 3
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen (1 mogelijk)

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Stanley Elkinprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Gass, WilliamVoorwoordSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd

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The comic story of a man's obsessive quest to build a fast food empire across America For the better part of the 1970s, entrepreneur Ben Flesh could expand his business kingdom with the snap of his fingers. His fast food restaurants and electronics stores were all a part of his rapidly growing domain, remaking America one enterprise at a time. But when a series of personal and professional catastrophes strike unexpectedly, Ben finds himself on the verge of losing it all.   Hailed as one of Stanley Elkin's greatest works, The Franchiser is a biting satire of American consumerism and the story of one man's all-consuming determination to create his lasting legacy, one business at a time.   This ebook features rare photos and never-before-seen documents from the author's estate and from the Stanley Elkin archives at Washington University in St. Louis.

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