Deuced

by Perry Crowe


Formats

Softcover
$26.50
Softcover
$26.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 10/7/2005

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 332
ISBN : 9781412053655

About the Book

Meet the Oblivion Brothers, Zip and Otto. Boyhood friends raised on television's hypnotic glow and intangible promises,they set off from the heartland, following its siren song to the source: Los Angeles. Now they work in the entertainment industry, producing what once dazzled their young eyes. But today's Hollywood has the accent firmly on the industry and not the entertainment. Glamour and glitz have turned to cubicles and fluorescent lights as the industry swells past any hope of quality control.

But for Zip and Otto, inside the machine churning out anything to fill the technicolor veins of the viewing public, the sparkles fade from everything and are replaced by the smeared fingerprints of Man. That is, until Zip hears another song, this one poured from the lips of Irene Mathy, musician and awestruck visitor to Los Angeles. With the world suddenly dazzling again, Zip stumbles off after the twinkling lights. Otto, too, strikes out on his own, making a push for career success in the fields of nepotism and egoism of television production. But with the Brothers divided, will they be strong enough to handle a fate worse than oblivion?

Deuced is a story of relationships;the ones we have with each other,the ones we have with the world around us and the ones we have with ourselves. It's about the frustrating discrepancy between theory and practice, the awful toll Man pays for his self-awareness and how we all try to get by. And how, in the end, we're all deuced.



About the Author

Perry Crowe grew up in Mounds View, Minnesota, a northern suburb of Minneapolis.ÊHe received a Bachelor's degree in English from the University of Iowa where he also participated in the Undergraduate Writers Workshop in Fiction. He now lives in Los Angeles.



Reviews

This is a book about sex, drugs and show-biz. Or, it's a book about nothing. Or, it's a simple love affair. Or, it's about friendship. Or, it's about how what may be a certainty to one person, will be similarly a certainty to a second person, but a completely different certainty. This book is all of these and more. If I were forced to define it closely I would describe it as one where different individuals' ideas of nothing can inflict on each other. I would also say that it is a damn fine novel.

We are in Los Angeles. Two friends, Zip (real name) and Otto, are out on the town with a friend. They are drinking and also heavily stoned, which we gather, as the novel progresses, is a normal state with them; there is a lot of drug use in this novel.

They go into a bar where folk music is being played. Zip is immediately smitten by the shy girl singer/guitarist called Irene who is performing. Much of the rest of the novel is taken up with their developing and eventually disintegrating relationship. There is a lot of them together, with Zip taking various quantities of various drugs and Irene being somewhat disapproving. There is also much discussion of religion, relationships, etc. Zip and Irene are obviously on completely different wavelengths.

What is not immediately apparent however, is that so are Zip and Otto. This doesn't begin to emerge until Otto's life starts to fall apart. This is just after Irene has left Los Angeles, claiming undying love for Zip. Things begin changing between Zip and Irene, as they communicate by e-mail and telephone, at the same time that Zip is trying, in his vague but generally well-meaning way, to help Otto.

So that's the sex (Zip and Irene) and the drugs (Zip, Otto and lots of other characters). What about the show-biz? Both Zip and Otto work in the reality television industry in Hollywood. There is a lot in this book about how this industry works. I have no idea whether Perry Crowe has any inside knowledge of this industry, whether he researched it or whether he made it all up. Whatever, I was completely convinced that this was quite likely how things were done, with the totally faked dating show presented in great detail and completely horrifying.

Much of this book seems to take place in a haze, with Zip reacting to his surroundings, rather than being part of it. And that, for Zip, is the problem. He is a generally likeable character who, without the slightest intention of doing so, causes havoc to those around him. He generally sleepwalks through his life but whether he can continue to do so after the events at the conclusion of this novel, seems very doubtful.

This book would make a very good film, with three cracking roles for young actors and space for some good cameos too. In the meantime, we are left with the novel and that is certainly no bad thing. Sex, drugs and show-biz or a relationship novel where the relationships change or are not what they appear to be? Both and more.

Review by Chris Williams


Deuced ~ Perry Crowe ~Trafford ~ Fiction: Contemporary

Take a Trip with the Oblivion Brothers!

Deuced is a fascinating snapshot of the lives of two young flatmates (the Oblivion Brothers) in modern day Los Angeles and explores their relationships with not only each other but with various other friends and family members. It shows you how, just when things seem to be ticking along nicely, the situation can suddenly deteriorate, without warning, beyond your control.

The story unfolds through the eyes of ‰?~Zip‰?T, one of the Oblivion Brothers, who is laid-back, rather stoned and a nice guy. He shares an apartment with his Oblivion Brother and boyhood friend, Otto, who is to a certain extent in his shadow. Zip soon meets Irene, an amateur folk-singer visiting her auntie and uncle and they rapidly fall in love despite their different attitudes to drugs and religion. Before very much longer and in a mist of cannabis smoke, Zip‰?Ts relationships (through no fault of his own) seem to crumble before his eyes.

I read Deuced with a completely open mind and was very pleasantly surprised by the subject and by the way it was written. It is totally believable and you could almost imagine someone telling you this story about something they had actually experienced. The author obviously has the ability to keep the reader interested and I found it difficult to put down. Perry Crowe tackles many issues along the way without trying to pander to any particular train of thought, so the drug use and the religious scepticism are uncompromising and very realistically depicted. Due to this, I would think this novel is better suited to a British audience rather than an American one because of the subject matter, but I could be wrong!

In conclusion, I would recommend this book to anyone as a thoroughly good and absorbing read and would go so far as to say that it is one of the best books portraying real-life situations that I have read recently. With the right exposure this novel would do extremely well and I could imagine Deuced making a very good film. Read it and take a trip with the Oblivion Brothers!