Author | Michael Brodsky |
---|---|
Cover artist | Mark Beyer |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Postmodern literature |
Published | 1994 (Four Walls Eight Windows) |
Media type | Print (clothbound hardcover, paperback) |
Pages | 367 |
ISBN | 978-1-56858-000-5 |
*** (pronounced Three Asterisks) is the fifth novel by Michael Brodsky published by Four Walls Eight Windows. The book centers on Stu Potts, working for Dov Grey, captain of industry, creating ***s out of raws. No underlying meanings for "***", nor for "raw", both of which occur frequently in the text, are directly suggested.
The novel opens with a 13-page section consisting almost entirely of paragraphs that begin "It all began with ...". These include some simple one-liners (including "bathroom smells, bathroom noises", "hunger, and thirst of course", "the loss of his credit cards") any one of which could start a typically written novel, but here do not. They also include longer paragraphs that refer all over the map, including some that look like they might have something to do with ***. For example, one paragraph starts by mentioning that Stu was very much liked by his fellow tenants (Mr. Bresson, Mr. Dostoevsky, Mr. Balzac, Mr. Xman). But being captioned very much liked was so terrible that Stu needed "a manly atmosphere, heady with *** work, to cure him of this pathos." [* 1] Another says that the beginning was when Stu felt he was one in an assembly line of listeners, each bound to repeat the story to the next listener. [* 2]
The story properly begins with Stu Potts attending a party hosted by Bette Kaye, noted for when "Dov Grey became Dov Grey." [* 3] Prominent among the attendees are Dov Grey and his wife Gwenda, employee Jomm Dawrson and his wife Tullshie (also called Miss Tullshie Dawrson née Dreadnought). Dov and Jomm share their hostility to the popular Hinkle-Winkle, who is "the eternal embodiment of goodish news," [* 4] and a "freeloading ... world-class houseguest." [* 5] In contrast, their wives are sympathetic to Hinkle-Winkle and his associates, "a band of brotherly strugglers all, unhierarchizable sodality of free souls." [* 5] We learn later that Gwenda's sister Trendy is "wife and, depending on the time of day, concubine" to Hinkle-Winkle. [* 6]
Stu is hired by Dov, engaged in housecleaning. After six months, [* 7] Stu hates his job, and long philosophical conversations with Jomm do not help. Along the way, Stu takes a break walking outside, where he is confronted by the receptionist, Ms. Redmount. [* 8] He ignores her, and interprets street activity as incomplete transformation of raw into ***.
The next day, Dov dictates to Redmount, now his private secretary, while they make love, witnessed by Stu and Jomm over a glass partition. [* 9] Soon after, Stu listens in on Jomm and Dov discussing Gwenda, raws, and ***s. [* 10] Gwenda then has Stu in for his six-month review.
This section contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry.(February 2023) |
This section may be too long and excessively detailed.(October 2023) |
... a stunning redefinition of the novel, a postmodern extravaganza that has as much in common with a video game or a pinball machine as it does with Tolstoy or Dickens.
— John C. Hawley, San Francisco Chronicle , 7/10/1994
[***] centers on language, meaning, and the nature of the storytelling process itself. Those who share Brodsky's deconstructionist views will probably find this a challenging, innovative work. Those who don't will likely find it unreadable.
— Lawrence Rungren, Library Journal, 1994
... a novel filled with intellectual fireworks ...
— Judith Upjohn, #$%!: review of ***, [1]
"There is no story," Brodsky informs us early in this experimental anti-story, a deconstructionist meditation on capitalism and existentialism that has all the warmth, humor, and sophistication of an endless Stalinist tract. From its title of three asterisks one can tell that the master of the oblique is out to make life miserable for those who dare to try to make sense of his purposefully impenetrable novel.
— ?, Kirkus Reviews, 1994
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