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From bestselling, internationally acclaimed author Dorota Maslowska
comes a hilarious and devastating satire of consumer culture. Set
in a bizarro, all-too-real imaginarium of American pop culture,
Honey, I Killed the Cats introduces us to two independent young
women struggling to live the lives that television and glossy
magazines have promised them. In a collision of street slang and
mass-media sloganeering, Maslowska's electrifying prose drives a
propulsive story about spiritual longing in a dispirited world.
Maslowska's novel examines the ways we attempt to exist and find
meaning in lives defined by what we buy. In this warped world
saturated by advertising and materialism, where everything can be
bought, from personality and physical traits to religion and
self-fulfillment, Joanne and Farah, two very different women form a
friendship both bonded in and ultimately destroyed by the
manipulations of consumer culture. Joanne has everything the
commercials say you should want-confidence, a carefree life,
happiness to excess. Farah is a self-loathing, envious, germophobic
malcontent. Through a shared metaphysical dream experience that
spills over into their increasingly troubled day-to-day lives,
these best friends find themselves consumed by their
equal-and-opposite obsessions. Widely regarded as Polish literary
sensation Maslowska's best novel yet, Honey, I Killed the Cats is a
powerfully emotional, hilariously grotesque satire of Western
consumer culture and the trends that go along with it.
"Nails" Robakoski is unraveling after his girlfriend Magda dumps
him. A tracksuited slacker who spends most of his time doing little
more than searching for his next line of speed and dreaming up
conspiracy theories about the Polish economy, Nails ricochets from
Magda, a doomed beauty who bewitches men, to Angela, a
proselytizing vegetarian Goth, to Natasha, a hellcat who tears his
house apart looking for speed, to Ala, the nerdy economics-student
girlfriend of the friend who stole Magda. Through it all, a
xenophobic campaign against the proliferating Russian black market
escalates, to the point where the citizens have to paint their
houses in national colors and one of these girls will be crowned
Miss No Russkies Day--or is that just in Nails' fevered mind?
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