Combine the horror of a terrified writer trapped by a winter
storm in Stephen King’s Misery with the rigid fundamentalist
society found in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s
Tale. Then, just for laughs (because this novel is full of them)
tell that story with the satiric irreverence of Michael Moore’s
Stupid White Men and you’ve got the The Devil and Daniel
Silverman, the funniest political novel of the season.
Known internationally as a cutting edge social critic (“Forever
holding current mores and institutions under the scrutiny of his
own evolving perceptions and values.” —Bill Moyers),
Theodore Roszak is also a prize-winning writer of outrageous fiction.
After taking on the legend of America’s best known ‘monster’
in The Memoirs of Elizabeth Frankenstein, and the ‘horrors’
of the movie industry in Flicker, he has set his incredible novelistic
imagination (“Like Thomas Wolfe on acid.” —The
Boston Globe) on one of the most frightening aspects of contemporary
society: religious fundamentalism. In The Devil and Daniel Silverman
Roszak has created two of the most divergent life styles on the
planet (that of a gay Jewish writer from liberal San Francisco
and anevangelical Christian sect in northern Minnesota) and literally
“snowed them in” under the same roof to force a hilarious
exploration of the political and spiritual schism in contemporary
American culture. Roszak began the book during the Clinton
impeachment, alarmed by the political grandstanding of the morally
self-righteous bible thumpers of the far right and finished it
just after the trade center bombings, when the potentiality of
intolerant fundamentalist doctrine became tragically apparent.
Danny Silverman is an over-the-hill novelist bullied by his agent
into accepting a strange—but strangely high paying—speaking
gig in an obscure evangelical college. After his lecture ends
in a near riot, Danny’s escape is thwarted by a massive
snowstorm and he finds himself stranded inside a religious sect
that scoffs at the theory of evolution, condones the assassination
of abortion doctors, abstains from alcohol, dancing, movies, views
even coffee as an evil stimulant, and thinks all homosexuals are
the incarnation of the anti-Christ. Alone, afraid, and frankly
appalled, Silverman finds himself forced to defend ideas he’s
taken for granted all his adult life, and to defend his life as
well.
Funny, bawdy, scholarly, wonderfully over-the-top, and yet remarkably
fair to liberals, conservatives and every one of us attempting
to navigate a moral course through our contemporary money- and
media-driven culture, The Devil and Daniel Silverman is a brilliant
satire that uses humor to deliver one simple moral theme: intolerance
is a bad way for people to relate to people.
When early readers started calling this book the funniest political
novel they had read since The Milagro Beanfield War, we sent a
copy to John Nichols, the author of Milagro, and this what he
said:
"'Oh no!" cried I when The Devil and Daniel Silverman
blew into my house as if propelled on the fierce gusts of a mirthful
blizzard: "Not another book to blurb!" To be polite,
however, I read the hilarious first couple of pages, which was
like eating of the Evil Apple, and I was hooked. Thank you, Eve!
I fell right into the infidel trap of this bawdy novel and couldn't
stop myself from charging headlong through the wild, delightful,
learned, and passionate romp that followed. This book is My Favorite
Mortal Sin of the Year, a first class Snow Job, right up there
with the best and most outrageous works of, say, Philip Roth and...Thomas
Berger. It's whacky and wise and very relevant to all the issues
of the day: The Scarlet Letter meets Sabbath's Theater, with echoes
of Little Big Man(!). Or would you believe Portnoy meets Theron
Ware? Hey, that may sound like a stretch, but this book is a wonderful
stretch by a writer galloping all out at the top of his form.
How do I know? The Bible tells me so."
"Hilarious...Urgency drives this novel's dark comedy...This
spirited send-up of Daniel Silverman's misadventures in Christendom
invited us to laugh at pious narrow-mindedness but also reminds
us never to underestimate the harm such self-righteousness can
do."
—The Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Social critic Roszak treats himself and us to a[n] ebullient
lampoon, whose targets include writers' frail egos and crowded
psyches, the publishing industry's deranged priorities, and the
nuts and bolts (especially the nuts) of religious fundamentalism."
—Kirkus Reviews
"A two-time National Book Award nominee, Roszak presents
a story one wishes were pardoy, but isn't. This important book
is highly recommended."
—Library Journal (Starred review)
"A very funny satire with wisdom at it's heart. Roszak has
a delightful ear for dialogue, which he employs to great effect.
It's fun to watch Silverman's politesse dissolve into sarcasm,
then acrid disbelief, when confronted with his conservative captors."
—BOOK Magazine
“Delicious! Roszak manages to create a good deal of merriment
from hapless Danny's long, strange trip to the hinterlands. His
message is worth pondering in these post-Sept. 11 times: Intolerance
is itself a deadly sin.”
—The Hartford Courant
“Funny and passionate…Right on target in its unsparing
portrayal of dogma and doctrine, the book skewers ultra-right-wing
orthodoxy, but is equally unflinching in its critique of closed
left-wing minds.”
—The Oakland Tribune
“Hair-raising…an intellectual pilgrimage and adrenaline-fueled
face-off [which] manages to combine expositions on apostasy and
animated snowmobile chase scenes, often seeming to take on its
own cinematic quality: a more simplistic rendering of the bleak
Midwestern landscape that fills Alexander Payne films like "Election"
and "Citizen Ruth." Characters seem drawn for the big
screen; the book's Christian campus ensemble seems primed to include
Kevin Spacey, Julianne Moore and, as the professor obsessed with
spiritual torment, Joaquin Phoenix.”
—The San Francisco Chronicle
“The Devil and Daniel Silverman takes on the bizarre circumlocutions
of the fundamentalist mind with hysterical results. Roszak’s
novel is a real accomplishment. This is the funniest novel I’ve
read in a long time.”
—Counterpoise
"Compulsively readable and often hilarious."
—Jerusalem Report
"A warm and witty satire that made me laugh out loud."
—National Public Radio
“Theodore Roszak has long been one of our most astute cultural
observers. In this very funny novel he takes mischievous delight
in skewering fundamentalist bigots and having us revel in the
experience.”
—Howard Zinn, Author of A People’s History of the
United States
"Damn! Here is a novel about America's culture wars that
is disguised as nothing but fun.
There is much gaiety in Theodore Rozak's The Devil and Daniel
Silverman—but even more wit.
"—Richard Rodriguez,
Essayist for PBS News Hour & Author of Brown: The Last
Discovery of America
“The Devil and Daniel Silverman is not only a profound
exploration of the political and spiritual schism in contemporary
American culture, it is hilarious and one of the best laughs I've
had in years.”
—Mary Mackey, Author of The Year the Horses Came
About The Author:
Theodore Roszak lives in Berkeley, where he is a professor of
history at California State University, Hayward. He is the author
of eighteen books, including the internationally praised best
seller, The Making of a Counter Culture. He has been a Guggenheim
Fellow and has twice been nominated for the National Book Award. His
articles have appeared in The New York Times, The Nation, The
Atlantic Monthly and Harper's. His novel about the movie industry,
Flicker, (“A brilliantly executed metaphysical thriller,”
-The Sunday Times of London) has become an international cult
favorite and The Memoirs of Elizabeth Frankenstein, a retelling
of the horror classic, received The James Tiptree Award, for "literature
that expands our understanding of gender.” Flicker is scheduled
by 20th Century Fox/Regency Pictures to become a feature film,
directed by Darren Aronofsky, director of "Pi" and Jim
Uhls, screenwriter of The Fight Club.
Theodore Roszak Answers Some
Questions
Available Now
CATEGORY: Fiction
PAGES: 348
TRIM: 6 x 9
ISBN: 0-9679520-7-7
PRICE: $15.95 / Paperback Original
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