Two takes, different worlds
Anvil $18.00 Reviewed by Karl Jirgens Tom Osborne's Dead Man in the Orchestra Pit begins with a film-noir style, moves to a rocking rhythm midway, then gallops madly while a hapless, lonely, Hank Pazik knocked senseless by a mattress tossed by party animals from a hotel balcony finds himself ki...
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description | Anvil $18.00 Reviewed by Karl Jirgens Tom Osborne's Dead Man in the Orchestra Pit begins with a film-noir style, moves to a rocking rhythm midway, then gallops madly while a hapless, lonely, Hank Pazik knocked senseless by a mattress tossed by party animals from a hotel balcony finds himself kidnapped by desperados who botch a robbery at Vancouver's Hyatt Regency during the historic Grey Cup game between the Argos and Stampeders. After flashbacks and cross-references between operatic form and literary structure, over-determinations of language, Hunter S. Thompson stylistics, and allusions to the muses, Hank is delivered safely home but not before extra-terrestrials carve the Nazca lines, an agoraphobic gunman with a Mossbert "Slugster" slide-action is blown to pieces, inebriated football fanatics shout synonyms for "penis" from hotel balconies, and opera singers performing La Traviata are transformed by the mind-bending effects of tackle-boxes of drugs purveyed by paranoid schizophrenics. |
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After flashbacks and cross-references between operatic form and literary structure, over-determinations of language, Hunter S. Thompson stylistics, and allusions to the muses, Hank is delivered safely home but not before extra-terrestrials carve the Nazca lines, an agoraphobic gunman with a Mossbert "Slugster" slide-action is blown to pieces, inebriated football fanatics shout synonyms for "penis" from hotel balconies, and opera singers performing La Traviata are transformed by the mind-bending effects of tackle-boxes of drugs purveyed by paranoid schizophrenics.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0008-4360</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Vancouver: The University of British Columbia - Canadian Literature</publisher><subject>Animals ; Coupland, Douglas ; Drug effects ; Drugs ; Novels ; Osborne, Tom ; Rhythm ; Singing ; Stylistics ; Synonyms ; Voice professionals</subject><ispartof>Canadian Literature, 2008 (198), p.114</ispartof><rights>COPYRIGHT 2008 The University of British Columbia - Canadian Literature</rights><rights>Copyright University of British Columbia Autumn 2008</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>313,780,784,792</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Jirgens, Karl</creatorcontrib><title>Two takes, different worlds</title><title>Canadian Literature</title><description>Anvil $18.00 Reviewed by Karl Jirgens Tom Osborne's Dead Man in the Orchestra Pit begins with a film-noir style, moves to a rocking rhythm midway, then gallops madly while a hapless, lonely, Hank Pazik knocked senseless by a mattress tossed by party animals from a hotel balcony finds himself kidnapped by desperados who botch a robbery at Vancouver's Hyatt Regency during the historic Grey Cup game between the Argos and Stampeders. 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subjects | Animals Coupland, Douglas Drug effects Drugs Novels Osborne, Tom Rhythm Singing Stylistics Synonyms Voice professionals |
title | Two takes, different worlds |
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