Synopsis/blurb.........
So there's video
footage of me not washing my hands in the bathroom at work. My dad says it's
the kind of the thing that can tank his whole business. That he has to be extra
careful. Don't I understand?
Usually when he's spewing all this, I just stand there.
Last week I was his show-and-tell for Sunday school class. We wore matching ties, and I was under strict orders not to smile or look sly. Some of those people were his customers, after all.
I don't know.
Anyway, bam, yeah, the camera caught me: I ran the water but didn't wash my hands.
Over the course of one shift working the window of his father's drive-through urinal, our sixteen-year-old Flushboy will have to not only juggle gallons of warm pee and deal with the worst flood ever (it's not water), but he'll also have to fend off the urine mafia, solve the citywide mystery of Chickenstein, and win his girlfriend back.
Usually when he's spewing all this, I just stand there.
Last week I was his show-and-tell for Sunday school class. We wore matching ties, and I was under strict orders not to smile or look sly. Some of those people were his customers, after all.
I don't know.
Anyway, bam, yeah, the camera caught me: I ran the water but didn't wash my hands.
Over the course of one shift working the window of his father's drive-through urinal, our sixteen-year-old Flushboy will have to not only juggle gallons of warm pee and deal with the worst flood ever (it's not water), but he'll also have to fend off the urine mafia, solve the citywide mystery of Chickenstein, and win his girlfriend back.
"My hat is off to Stephen Graham
Jones, because he is the kind of author that makes the frustrated writer inside
every book reviewer cringe with self-doubt."—PopMatters
Stephen Graham Jones is the author of ten novels, three collections, and one novella. He is a full professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and in the low-residency program for University of California Riverside—Palm Desert. Stephen is forty-one, and married with children.
Stephen Graham Jones is the author of ten novels, three collections, and one novella. He is a full professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and in the low-residency program for University of California Riverside—Palm Desert. Stephen is forty-one, and married with children.
What on earth
was I thinking? A book cover with a toilet on and the title Flushboy......and the premise of a 16
year old boy, working at his dad’s drive through urinal. Not sure which part of
my brain thought this would be a compelling read.
It wasn't. I don’t doubt the author can write entertaining
books, I just don’t think they are entertainment for me.
I wasn't put off by the mechanics of the customer’s usage of
the John and Jane cups provided at our innovative business, just bored and
indifferent to events due to a lack of empathy for our 16 year old hero.
Mercifully short at 160-odd pages long, but in my opinion
could have been vastly improved by everyone in the book drowning in a tank of
urine in the first 10 pages, followed by 150 pages of anything else.......doodles,
cartoons, recipes, photos of toilets, anything.
2 stars from 5..........why not a 1? He can write and he deserves
a star for at least producing something original if not something I enjoyed.
I might have been better served by reading his Zombie Bake-Off or more likely Growing Up Dead in Texas.
Accessed from Net Galley........something I brought upon
myself.
Col - I give you credit for trying something new, but this wouldn't be for me, either. Nope.
ReplyDeleteMargot, cheers.....at least I won't now be wondering what am I missing out on!
DeleteHilarious! I've been quite dreading this since seeing it in your sidebar, and now I got to enjoy the review without feeling the slightest temptation to read it. Result.
ReplyDeleteYou did advise on the perils of going mad on Net Galley.......but it was already too late by then. I'll take one for the team on this occasion.
DeleteThe title Flushboy gets attention but for all the wrong reasons. Thanks for taking one for the team.
ReplyDeleteI think it's only to be expected that every so often I find something that's a bit disagreeable I suppose. Disappointing but, who wants to read the same book over and over again?
DeleteBetter luck next time!
Hi Col! I was thinking of you and decided to pay a visit to the library, When I saw Flushboy come up I was intrigued enough to surf over to Amazon and read the first few pages. Sure enough, this writer can write, However, the story got off to a slow start for me and there's not really enough plot driving it to hold me. Author Jones has something going there, just not enough. I liked the cover.
ReplyDeleteThanks for all the support you give writers and books, Col.
Cheers,
Anonymous-9
Hey Anon-9 thanks for stopping by. No problem re the support thins - I do like trying new authors and under the radar books as well as the established.
DeleteAny news on the second book?
Just the cover would put me off. Of course, I do have a thing for book covers. Sorry this one did not turn out to be your type of thing.
ReplyDeleteNo problem Tracy - perhaps it needed a skull on the top of the loo seat?
DeleteForgive me but LOL. Sorry Tracy. We know how fond you are of skulls.
DeleteKeishon....am I awful for teasing?
DeleteTracy, couldn't post here so left her comment on THE DISPOSABLES
Read her comment and I see you were right ;-)
DeleteMale intuition!
DeleteCol, as Tracy says, the cover put me off to. I see humour behind the toilet, though.
ReplyDeletePrashant, I'm not sorry I read it as who knows - I might have loved it. Interesting how covers play a big part in book selection and deciding whether or not to give something a shot.
DeleteAt worst, I'm usually indifferent to a lot of covers, I can't remember the last cover that impacted negatively on me.