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Dot in The Universe : A Novel

Dot in The Universe : A Novel

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: amazon review espionage mission
Review: Hi, i am in fact NOT akm ahmed. I'm in New york university's bobst library right now and this computer just happens to be logged on to akm ahmed's amazon account. What boonful coincidence. Unfortunately, you will never know my true identity. I could be anything. Use your imagination. This is quite exciting for me. (see title of this review). I feel like a super-spy. Of course, this is also very, very pathetic. Oh well. This book by Lucy Ellmann is very very good. Funny, sad, angry, and many other things. I hope you buy it and enjoy it as much as you would buy and enjoy mcdonalds fast food or a magazine like Seventeen or something. Again, I am NOT akm ahmed. I am an imposter using akm ahmed's account. I hope I go to jail for this. It would be an exciting experience. I have to go now. I keep looking furtively around in case akm ahmed comes up and beats me in my skull.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dot is not insignificant!
Review: I read this because Michiko Kakutani of the New York Times liked it, and she is like Mikey of cereal-fame...she never likes anything! At any rate, I found this book very funny in a dark way. I laughed out loud several times, an once I got used to the precious use of CAPITAL LETTERS, I liked it very much indeed.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Unusual, entertaining and wholly her own
Review: In this book Ellman has created a very unusual story that kept me wondering what was going to happen next. While her interest in frequently accentuating words in ALL CAPS is odd at first, once you get used to it, it becomes more like when a friend puts her hand on your arm to emphasise her point during conversation.

The story of Dot reflects much of the malaise in society, and matter of factly and amusingly incorporates some taboo stuff such as infidelity, porno flicks, murder, vivisection and incest. Ellman also has a knack of gettting into tangents, or at least the first seem like tangents, but their power is likly very calucalated. I found her cheeky tirade on What if Animals Did This to You? (where she invites the reader to imagine if animals treated us as we treat them) to be especially amusing.

if you want something cooky, a little bit naughty and very unusual, then this book is or you.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: You'll Never Look at Tea Cosies the Same Way Again
Review: Lucy Ellman is a revelation. She's an American expat who has taken up residence in England and has acquired the saucy edginess of some of the better English satirists (think of a female Waugh or Amis). While maybe not yet in that league stylistically, she is, at least on the basis of this book, equally as funny.

Ellman's central character, Dot Butser starts out relatively pleased with herself, with her middle class English seaside lifestyle and with her sexually charged husband, whom she believes to be a deep sea fisherman. As the story unfolds, Dot's universe unravells. Hilariously. Bit by bit, Dot comes to see the sordid truth behind the comfortable facade that she has created for herself. She embarks on a quest of self-discovery, depression, suicide, rebirth (several rebirths, in fact, as an assortment of creatures that will have Buddhist and Hindus everywhere chuckling knowingly to themsleves). Finally she comes full circle, in a nice, ironic ending.

Readers who are offended by course language should steer clear. Ellman has the vocabulary of your typical longshoreman. She's pretty graphic about bodily functions and sexual proclivities. But she's not Andrew Dicey Clay. There is a point to her vulgarity, as it reflects the environment she so wittily demolishes. Like all good satirists, she's not too high on the present state of society, neither in England, nor even more negatively, in America.

About the tea cosies. It will give you a brief idea of Ellman's style and humor to illustrate Dot's preoccupation with them. It drives Dot's philandering husband, John, up the wall that she is so obsessed with the things:

"Particularly perturbing to him was Dot's TEA-COSY COLLECTION. They reminded him of his grandma's UNDIES, saggy, baggy and stained.... . Dot's tea cosies were ancient, home-made WOOLEN concoctions, knitted by women inexplicably driven to provide the world with decorative structures in which to house teapots. "

Some readers may be put off by the stylistic device of using ALL CAPS for emphasis, however, I found it an integral part of the humor. I didn't always understand what motivated the choices for why particular words were so emphasized, but I wasn't distracted by it.

Ellman has a great satirical eye and comedic voice. I'm certainly looking forward to reading more titles from this lady. If you're a fan of British satire, or just enjoy a fun, brief read now and again, this short, episodic novel will fill the bill. I had to deduct one star for one Ellman device that gets a bit tiresome after a while. She's obsessed with lists. Sometimes the lists are rather clever and funny. At other times they are mind numbing and one wants to have done with them. In the overall scheme, it's a minor annoyance and Ellman fully succeeded in keeping me entertained for 200 pages.

BEK

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dot is not insignificant!
Review: Lucy Ellmann is funny, sad, and concise. She gets to her points very fast, and her point is that things are sad and funny. I forgot that she is angry too. Angry, funny, sad, and concise. About the book: it's angry, funny, sad, and concise. I remember this one part where it was really angry and funny and sad. Okay. But I really did read this book and I think it deserves five stars.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: funny, sad, concise
Review: Lucy Ellmann is funny, sad, and concise. She gets to her points very fast, and her point is that things are sad and funny. I forgot that she is angry too. Angry, funny, sad, and concise. About the book: it's angry, funny, sad, and concise. I remember this one part where it was really angry and funny and sad. Okay. But I really did read this book and I think it deserves five stars.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Structure isn't everything
Review: This book is only mildly amusing, and while the circularity of the plot resolves itself quite nicely, it seems the fragmentary nature of the book is structured to encompass the author's personal diatribes against animal testing (severe) and fat americans (actually amusing, and interesting given recent news). The home decorator in Hell is also amusing, and could perhaps be read as social or political commentary. While there are snippets of good writing, the justification for the main suicide is present but vague. And why the words in All CAPS?


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