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Te presento a Jay. Te presento a Ben. Conócelos.
Jay ha quedado con su viejo amigo Ben en una habitación de hotel, no lejos del Capitolio. En el transcurso de la tarde compartirán una deliciosa comida y abrirán una botella de vino del minibar. Charlarán de todo tipo de asuntos, como la nueva cámara de Ben, Irak o el desafortunado destino de un pollo en libertad.
Y Jay le explicará a Ben exactamente cómo y por qué está planeando asesinar al presidente de los Estados Unidos de América.
El escritor más original de su generación, la novela más audaz hasta la fecha.
From Baker (A Box of Matches, 2003, etc.), a tiny little slip of a thing about-about what? About assassinating George W. Bush? Yup. And a droll piece of work it is, at times even hilarious. A fellow named Jay, it seems, has called an old friend named Ben, saying to Ben that he must talk with him, urgently. Ben drives like mad to DC, goes to the hotel room Jay is staying in, helps Jay put a 390-minute audiotape into a tape machine, then turn it on and test it ("JAY: Testing, testing. Testing. Testing"). Once it's running, the book begins, the whole portrayed as a two-man closet drama consisting of what the tape records. A bit of small talk-the two haven't seen each other for quite a spell-and then, bingo: "JAY: I'm going to assassinate the president." ("BEN: You're shitting me, right?") Nope, no shit. At least, it seems that's the answer, since Jay even has a view of the White House-or thinks he does, that the house of the Prez is just behind a certain clump of trees-an early hint of Jay's lack of a perfect grip on reality. He's got magic bullets, he says. And little razor-sharp discs that fly through the air. And other things, including a gun. And, boy, does he have complaints. The nation's biggest employer is Wal-Mart, he declares: "Sam Walton's kids are some of the richest people in the world. The money those four have . . . [It's] enough to make you shit. It's like they're sitting in tiny rubber dinghies, floating on seas of hog waste. And it all came from those stores. Our country's dying, man! We're killing people and we're dying at the same time! I brought a hammer along." High humor, ghastly seriousness (Jay really does have a gun), and a great question, to remain unanswered here:Does he do it?An absolute treasure for anti-Bushists, the purest sin-and-snake-venom deceit and villainy to pro-Bushists. Let the reader-voter call it. Agent: Melanie Jackson/Melanie Jackson Agency
More Reviews and RecommendationsThe undisputed Master of Minutia, Nicholson Baker is known for elegantly written, virtually plotless novels, filled with meticulously detailed descriptions, and for nonfiction that is unconventional, passionate, and often controversial.
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August 15, 2004: I read this book in the store. I finished it in 45 minutes. I was afraid to buy it, because of the context. It was the most amazing piece of writing I have read in years. It really stuck with me for the rest of the day. It was like reading hte best interview ever.