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The Boss is Dead | ||||
2005 • 1-58510-177-X • paper • 128 pages • 5 ½ x 8 ½ • $9.95 | About the Author | Reviews | | ||||
It's here, at last, exposed! the whole stinking, fetid, painful, unexpurgated story of life in the fast-food-biz lane. In the grind of the working-for-minimum-wage lane. In the working-for-the-boss-you-hate lane. Who hasn’t had this dream? You think the picture on the cover is the boss? Wrong! It's the night grillman who thinks he is free at last, free at last.... When Pullins was first hired into publishing, the national sales manager of the publishing company asked him if he thought selling books was going to be any different from selling hamburgers which he was doing. Because, the manager said, if I thought it was, it wasn’t. He was right, although he maybe didn't know it. He hadn’t fried any hamburgers.
To download a sample page or two, click here. The first in a series of short books and plays published by Focus. And the first by the boss.
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Ron Pullins is a publisher and writer. His work has appeared in several journals. This novella first appeared as a stage play. | ||||
"What's the play about? It's all about expectations. Don't have 'em." -- An insightful 11 year old speaking about the stage version of The Boss Is Dead Chris Mann, underachiever, occasional poet, and night manager of Burger Bear, is a kind of American Everyman. You can almost see Tom Hanks in the role. At one time or another, most of us have had that job slinging hash, driving delivery trucks, or bagging groceries. For that matter, is management really more than a pay-raise for the same humiliation and meaninglessness just farther up the food chain? The Boss is Dead packs a lot of ideas into a 124-page novella. It gets us to look at the many ways we compromise ourselves, how easily we succumb to petty hatreds, how readily we will oppress as we complain about our oppression. While Pullins recreates that familiar rogues gallery of temporary coworkers and creepy managers who insist upon taking the ridiculous seriously, he also makes us look at how willingly we will plot the downfall of others and how much self-loathing we will endure for the comfort of even the most miserable employment. Pullins avoids the convenient "post-modern" dodge of easy irony or affecting that anomie that flattens so much contemporary fiction. The Boss is Dead walks a tightrope between the brutal and vacant realism of Camus and the farcical absurdities of Kafka and Becket. Yet America, being what it is, supports the conceit. It's alternately funny and close to the bone. If Ron Pullins first novel has a few flaws, it definitely takes risks and sets its sights on the truth. -- Brian Kologe, from Amazon.com review Chris, the night manager of a fast food restaurant, pulls the reader into his own alienation as he gradually tells us what it is like to work in this industry: extreme competition among the stores in the neighborhood and the chain to sell as much unhealthy, grease laden food as they can, cooked and served by a cadre of teenagers whose anomie is laced with that of the customers who are hypnotized by the cheap food and lured by a cheap thrill (someone dressed up as Burger Bear). Chris, who wants out of the industry as badly as he want to please Keith, his manager, or Wackoff, the district manager, is somehow unable to please either. He hangs with the teenager help in vacant parking lots after hours drinking and having no-nothing conversations. While he struggles with his own lack of acceptance in the fascist managerial environment, he in turn meets out the same savage humiliation on young Sorenson, who manages to keep a smile on his face even when told to crawl under the grill and clean up every speck of grease on the wall and floor. As Chris attempts to move up the food chain of management, he uncovers a company illegality - stealing the used grease and selling it - that he is sure will have his boss fired and the store (at last) will be his. The reader is caught in the wonderment of why Chris wants to continue working at the store, more or less dedicating his life to being manager, and Chris' obvious loathing for the entire operation. The last few pages give a relief of fresh air that maybe Chris will do something else with his life - although the reader will not be able to step into a fast-food restaurant again without carrying the images Pullins has created - anomie, fascism, humiliation - all to give us the cheap food we think we need and deserve. -- Pam Burris, Stonybrook NY
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