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Totally Killer: A Novel (2009)

by Greg Olear(Favorite Author)
3.69 of 5 Votes: 4
ISBN
0061735299 (ISBN13: 9780061735295)
languge
English
publisher
William Morrow Paperbacks
review 1: If you've graduated from college in the past couple of years and are living in New York City, there's a very good chance that life sucks for you right now. Why? The economy. Kinda seems like a cliché reason, but it's true. Huge numbers of recent grads are unemployed or holding a part-time job that pays minimum wage and has nothing to do with that degree they just spent thousands of dollars on. But guess what? You're not the first group this has happened to! Back in 1991, things were just as bad—back when a Bush was in office, the US was involved in another war in the Middle East, and NYC was just a little seedier.This is the historical setting for Greg Olear's debut novel, Totally Killer. The story focuses on Taylor, a 23-year-old single and jobless graduate from Missou... moreri. We hear the story, however, from Taylor's roommate Todd, who tells us in the very beginning that Taylor is dead and we're going to learn why. Taylor comes to the Big Apple with glitter in her eyes, and she's anxious to live the New York City dream. After months of searching for a job and nothing to show for it, Taylor is understandably frustrated. When an invitation for a mysterious employment agency called Quid Pro shows up in her mailbox, Taylor figures it can't hurt to give them a call. Quid Pro Quo proves to be quite different from any other employment agency Taylor has visited—a nice building, expensive decor. She easily lands a perfect job and, even better, a perfect boyfriend, but [as the publisher blurb states, and I have to steal its dramatic teaser:] "perfection as its price."Totally Killer is essentially a piece of historical fiction, just using a history that isn't too remote. The author does a fabulous job of setting the scene as New York in 1991. I didn't live here then [I was six years old:], and neither did Olear, but I certainly got a feel of the setting from his descriptions—sentences that reiterate how there was no email or internet or cell phones, and how employment agencies and classifieds were the main ways to find a job. It reminds you that not only has technology changed, it has certainly hugely changed the way we function as a society.This is book is one part thriller (who killed Taylor??), one part satire built around the following idea: recent grads can't find a job because baby-boomers are still in the workforce. So what's the easiest way to fix that? Kill them off, of course. Olear creates a story in which the outlandish becomes almost justifiable, and it's peppered with lots of themes and pop culture references that make this book almost as relatable today, though it's set almost two decades ago.I enjoyed the perspective from which the story was told. While I got to know the characters, I never felt I had the time to decide if I liked them or not. It's one of those stories that just carried me along as one event flowed into another. Olear did an excellent job of simultaneously working through the setting and characters and plot, and I had a hard time putting this one down.
review 2: Over all, I liked it! It was fun, light, and exciting. While I think that, yes, some of the plot twists were a little obvious, I felt like that was part of the fun of the novel. I love the conspiracy theory aspect to the story, and I think that it fit perfectly for this cast of characters. I think that my favorite part of the book is that the narrator is kind of creepy (even if he doesn't mean to be), and he has that kind of "Rear Window" aspect of everything... he sees what is happening in front of him, yet he has no control over it. Great read. Really fun. Looking forward to the next one. less
Reviews (see all)
sab
So far I love it.I think the plot is good, and I like how it is going so far.
TaraD3
Clever, amusing book about being a 20-something in 1991 NYC.
cutielisa29
I think my expectations were too high with this book.
sarafina0101
Great book. Great wit and wonderful writing.
Kat
Very fun and totally engaging read. Totally!
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