True to the digitized consumerized world presented in the novel, Michael Hartnett's Universal Remote has something for everybody. It is a postmodern journey through suburbia arresting the reader with its visions of misunderstood, misapplied and misinterpreted technology. Universal Remote is all at once a mystery, comedy, satire and personal manifesto in which the author deftly intertwines the elements of a technologically starved society which knows not what it craves for. The novel also achieves something rarely, if ever, found in postmodern literature: it is a page turner. Hartnett successfully blends the elements of his story into what becomes a satirized mosaic manifesto of suburban culture. No, this is not another novel which simply highlights false values, hollow lifestyles and empty existence ala suburban styling; rather, Universal Remote uses suburban Long Island as its setting to allow a larger loftier vision to seep through like the toxic waste responsible for killing the rather philosophical Satan, who has several cameos (mainly he shows up dead). During a series of sharp opening scenes that include a science teacher lopping off his pinkie at a lecture, reporter Russell Pines joins Prometheus Labs to write PR for the messiah of technological gadgetry, a Universal Remote that has the ability to allow the owner to control all his devices and equipment from wherever he is. While the idea has been done before, Hartnett's treatment and plot orbiting around the device make the novel a truly original work. From his exposure to the device, Russell Pines is finally inspired into writing a long desired column series on what his life would be like if he immersed himself for a year in the artificial and technological elements of our existence. That means Rus as "Technoman" must eat only unnatural foods, interact through machines, sleep only with women who have had plastic surgery, etc. In the midst, Pines unwittingly meanders into technological sabotage, in and out of his fragmented relationship with his son, becomes completely wired to everything from his car to his physical nourishment, chases the story of Satan's final days, is visited by his past, throws himself into one of the funniest and outrageously politically incorrect sex scenes written to date, and becomes a target/hunter for a counter technoculture terrorist who may or may not exist, Paddy Dangus. The world Hartnett creates and examines is skillfully satirized. Upon it completion, the novel remains on the mind of the reader and beckons for continuance and reexamination. It is Hartnett's first novel, a bold and successful attempt which creates another welcome original voice to postmodern literature.
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List price: $24.95 (that's 30% off!)