Son of the Great American Novel
New edition of James Fritzhand's debut 1971 novel.
Overnight, the Arden K. Hoffstetter sensation is born when his 3,000-page novel Flush floods the bestseller racks of the land. Longer than Gone with the Wind, wetter than Moby Dick, dirtier than Lolita-the titanic epic Flush springs from his childhood fascination with the destiny of toilet water.
Oversexed beauties kiss the sleep from his eyes, movie moguls make outrageous bids for the rights, Greenwich Village orgies entwine him, and thunderous subways take him to the outskirts of reality-Brooklyn.
With acid-etched parody and dazzling acrobatic wit, Son of the Great American Novel is a blockbuster trip through instant fame, the deli society of the literary elite, and the turbulent soul of a dewy-eyed youth on the threshold of carnal knowledge.
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Become an affiliate"I tremble to call it a trend, but there does seem to be more humor about than in recent seasons. And of this new wavelet, Son of the Great American Novel is a particularly joyful ripple. . . . Mr. Fritzhand has some recognizable comic talents."
- The New York Times, March 7, 1971
"A wickedly entertaining first novel."
- Publishers Weekly, January 25, 1971
"A funny, funny book with some mighty perceptive social commentary underlying the humor."
- The Memphis Press-Scimitar, February 5, 1971
"Fritzhand uses words well. They pound, they gush, they tumble down the pages like a mighty waterfall."
- The Courier-Journal, March 7, 1971