Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas |
| | | | Title: | Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas | | Author: | Tom Robbins | | Publisher: | Bantam | | Type: | Book / Paperback | | Publication Date: | 01 November, 1995 | | ISBN / ISBN-13: | 0553377876 / 9780553377873 | | List Price: | $14.00 | | You Save: | $2.80 | | Amazon Price: | $11.20 | |
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Product Description When the stock market crashes on the Thursday before Easter, you—an ambitious, although ineffectual and not entirely ethical young broker—are convinced that you’re facing the Weekend from Hell. Before the market reopens on Monday, you’re going to have to scramble and scheme to cover your butt, but there’s no way you can anticipate the baffling disappearance of a 300-pound psychic, the fall from grace of a born-again monkey, or the intrusion in your life of a tattooed stranger intent on blowing your mind and most of your fuses. Over these fateful three days, you will be forced to confront everything from mysterious African rituals to legendary amphibians, from tarot-card bombshells to street violence, from your own sexuality to outer space. This is, after all, a Tom Robbins novel—and the author has never been in finer form.
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Fun To Read And Good Commentary On Work/life Balance 31 May, 2008 For as zany and irreverent as this book is, its insight into the US economy and workforce is surprisingly adept. It yields equal expertise to tarot card readings, eschatologically attuned amphibians, and ancient African mystics as it does to the Nikkei index, commodities put/call schemes, and international liquidity trends.
This witches brew of both bourgeoisie and harebrained excesses is delightfully funny to read. The main character's tug-of-war between her devotion to her career and the allure of a higher existential calling provides the foreground for Robbins' unique perspective on contemporary American life.
Also, as a world history fan, I especially liked the information on Timbuktu.
Entertaining, funny, witty, and fast-paced. I highly recommend it.
- Reviewed by customer ID: AYZO4X4MGKK4U
"disaster's Always Best When It's On A Grand Scale." 21 August, 2007 ... and the scale certainly is grand in Tom Robbins' rollicking riot of a novel. It opens with the beginning of a disastrous three-day weekend for one Gwendolyn Mati, a lovingly unlikable stockbroker whose ambitions are sky high and whose perceptions seem hopelessly shallow. It is the night before Good Friday and there has been a disastrous plunge in the stock market that has the whole economy screaming disaster, and Gwen finds herself facing termination on Monday morning thanks to some shady ethics she exercised in her client's portfolios that have been brought to light by the crash. Her once-promising boyfriend, Belford, is annoying her to no end after developing an unhealthy dose of Christian guilt that is compelling him to leave his promising real estate career for (gasp!) social work. Gwen desperately needs to find a way to keep her job before Monday morning, but she can't seem to get a seemingly sleazy former stockbroker named Larry Diamond off her mind. And things only get worse the following day, when Belford's born-again pet monkey escapes and Gwen's best friend, a 300 pound psychic named Q-Jo, vanishes. All this happens in the first hundred pages of "Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas," and the Robbins roller coaster has only just begun. There's still a curious cancer treatment, a bunch of overly rich and rowdy teenagers, celestial interference, a sex offender, disappearing frogs, a transfixing Van Gogh sketch, aliens, and more to come.
"Half Asleep" is at its riotous best in its first half, when Robbins gives free reign to his limitless imagination, and the result is a philosophical-comedy mind-warp that could give Vonnegut's masterful Breakfast of Champions a run for its money ... until the second half of the novel devolves into a talky jumble of rambling philosophical dialogue that does more to annoy the reader than to enlighten him. I like what Robbins is saying underneath it all (that we need to chill out, think about how we define our lives, and focus on what really matters instead of allowing money and ambition steer us off course), but he weakens his argument by muddling it with random references to alien mushroom spores, enemas, et al. His specious asides confound more than anything else, and make you long for the carefree opening salvo that had said so much more without trying nearly as hard. The ending is also truly disappointing because it is all too sudden and leaves you with too many questions.
This was my first Robbins novel, and despite its flaws I did enjoy it. I am particularly impressed by his unique descriptive style: instead of telling us that someone has the chills he writes that "ice cubes clink against the swizzle stick of your spine." Nice touch, Mr. Robbins. I look forward to exploring the rest of his canon in the future. I just hope that there's more madcap glee than abstruse philosophy.
Grade: B-
- Reviewed by customer ID: AAIL33CYCT47J
Amazing Author Still Enjoyable! 11 December, 2007 While I have always enjoyed this author, I had not had the chance to read this one... It does not dissapoint! A great relaxing escape for your free time! An excellent imaginitive endeavor... Well worth the cash...
- Reviewed by customer ID: ASKOVR9PM4ZAP
For Space Aliens On Vacation In Seattle 02 February, 2008 Though I wouldn't necessarily say that this was my favorite Tom Robbins read, I keep returning to it. There is something very charming about the prose, something very sucker-punch about our naive protagonist, something very engaging about the very short time-frame over which the tale plays out. It's a fun read and typical of Robbins in as much as he's trying to turn some taken-for-granted beliefs and turn them upside down; but this one is more environmental than it is religious or spiritual in its ... well, in its nature.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A1L94WV25FV2QT
If You're A Tom Robbins Fan, 07 February, 2008 this book will not dissappoint. It's even worth reading twice just to savor his metaphors!
- Reviewed by customer ID: A3P9GUHCEB2G4P
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