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[LAC]≫ Descargar Free Not For Public Consumption Frank P Lipton 9780979156304 Books

Not For Public Consumption Frank P Lipton 9780979156304 Books



Download As PDF : Not For Public Consumption Frank P Lipton 9780979156304 Books

Download PDF Not For Public Consumption Frank P Lipton 9780979156304 Books


Not For Public Consumption Frank P Lipton 9780979156304 Books

I really took a liking to how the author wrote the character Murray. He isn't the cookie cutter hero / protagonist of most novels. He feels more genuine in his imperfections. The paranoia, and I don't know if you'd call it OCD or schizophrenia, but his behaviors were just like some I had encountered during my work in emergency services. It made me wonder as I was reading it, whether or not the people he was talking to really existed or not. He seems an individual that is intent on studying people. All people. He also seems to have an odd distraction with the relationship with his mother. All in all, he is a person that you can't take in the way you would most people on the day to day.

Murray starts to look into the possibility that people can "create" their own reality. This melds into a conversation about homelessness with his friend Kirby. This conversation, and those he has recorded from a City Council Meeting, and his observations get twisted into a play that is read at a psychiatric facility. At this point, I still wasn't convinced he wasn't actually one of the patience and he was dreaming up his own reality. This book definitely has a lot of twists! It will make you start to question Murray's reality.

Murray chases that reality that he wants to see, something we probably all wish we could so so freely. It's here that we get Act II of Murray's play. After all he had seen, the arrests you read about, you don't expect the Homeless Man to be released. But again, Murray is creating his own reality. Even on a stage!

This book will make you take a moment to really observe the world for what it is, how people see things, and really make you wonder about if people really do make their own misery - or happiness.

Read Not For Public Consumption Frank P Lipton 9780979156304 Books

Tags : Not For Public Consumption [Frank P. Lipton] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. We see them on the corners and doorsteps of every major city but we know very little about them. Who are these people on the fringes of our society? How did they get there? And was it ever by choice? Welcome to the world of society's Underground--the outliers,Frank P. Lipton,Not For Public Consumption,Razors Edge,0979156300,Literature & Fiction General

Not For Public Consumption Frank P Lipton 9780979156304 Books Reviews


This brilliantly constructed novel explores the concept of sanity/insanity through the often hilarious experiences of a group of people who have dropped out of society. The plot twists and turns in the manner of a first-rate psychological thriller. The thrill here includes discovering the truth about the protagonist, Murray. Is he merely secretive and possibly involved in some sort of underground movement? Is he insane? Has he been driven to insanity or is the appearance of insanity a concious choice on his part? The novel takes a fresh look at the age-old question what is normal? An entertaining, compelling read-at-a-single-sitting book.
I liked this book. I read it while I was stuck in the airport when my flight was canceled. It helped to take me out of the foul mood I was in about the airline mess. It is a funny book and gives good insight about people you will not find in other novels. It is even a little disturbing in that way. I admit I was still thinking about things I had read several days after finishing the book. My only problem with the book is that the author seemed to actually like the protagonist and other characters. These are people on the fringe of society for a reason. These sorts of people do not contribute anything to society. They only suck it dry. And I wish the author had not presented them as having some special insights the rest of us are lacking. Other than that I recommend getting this book.
Murray Bardos is presented as a crazy, broken shell of a man.
But as Frank's engrossing tale of the lost, cast-off and overlooked denizens of society unfolds, you begin to realize that all is not as it seems. Who is Murray Bardos? Who are the strange men who follow him? What strange connection does he have with his cat, Shadow? Frank's tale raises questions about who we are, the assumptions we make of other people and the true value of a human being. Required reading for anyone who questions the belief that a house with a white picket fence is the ultimate goal in life.
Not for Public Consumption by Frank P. Lipton is a free NetGalley ebook that I read in early October.

Originally published in 2007, this is a witty, random, slightly self-depreciating, mostly 3rd-person narration/slice of life (nearly 2nd-person in the sense of all-knowingness and approximation of times) for Murray. He overhears a lot of conversation and engages in script-like dialogues between unrelated characters, but there's a similar kind of topics covered (i.e. memory, life’s experiences, confrontation, death, and different dimensions).
Lipton's book Not for Public Consumption was indeed very compelling and dramatic. There is a great build up as the characters are introduced, as their world is introduced to the reader. I found there was a mix of thrilling intrigue as well as satirical humor. This story has a plot driven depth to the story, and brings it together on different levels. Gritty and raw, slightly dark, and bringing light to a society that is definitely not part of what anyone would call normal, which is what makes this story so compelling to read. Couldn't put it down until the end.
Murry Y Bardos is not exactly your typical guy. That’s okay though because he doesn’t particularly care about normal and tends to hang out with those on the fringe of society. He works for an underground pirate radio station-Liberation Radio-to help fight overt oppression of citizen’s freedoms; some might feel differently about whether it is actually oppression. His closest friend is his cat whom his other friends agree he has a “bonded” relationship. Mr. Bardos is not close with family but remains in contact with his mother although the relationship is conflicted. They each have their own version of his childhood and life, not surprisingly starkly different.
Mr. Bardos eschews jobs or being imprisoned by the workforce and spends a lot of his time writing. He belongs to an outpatient activity writing group (implying he was a former psychiatric patient-you can see signs throughout the book). While outside his home, Mr. Bardos observes people and takes copious notes on his observations. In the writings we learn a lot about his past and who is possibly in those black cars that are parked outside his door, why he keeps getting hang-ups, and why people mistake him for a doctor.
Overall a good book with multiple topics to keep you interested.
I really took a liking to how the author wrote the character Murray. He isn't the cookie cutter hero / protagonist of most novels. He feels more genuine in his imperfections. The paranoia, and I don't know if you'd call it OCD or schizophrenia, but his behaviors were just like some I had encountered during my work in emergency services. It made me wonder as I was reading it, whether or not the people he was talking to really existed or not. He seems an individual that is intent on studying people. All people. He also seems to have an odd distraction with the relationship with his mother. All in all, he is a person that you can't take in the way you would most people on the day to day.

Murray starts to look into the possibility that people can "create" their own reality. This melds into a conversation about homelessness with his friend Kirby. This conversation, and those he has recorded from a City Council Meeting, and his observations get twisted into a play that is read at a psychiatric facility. At this point, I still wasn't convinced he wasn't actually one of the patience and he was dreaming up his own reality. This book definitely has a lot of twists! It will make you start to question Murray's reality.

Murray chases that reality that he wants to see, something we probably all wish we could so so freely. It's here that we get Act II of Murray's play. After all he had seen, the arrests you read about, you don't expect the Homeless Man to be released. But again, Murray is creating his own reality. Even on a stage!

This book will make you take a moment to really observe the world for what it is, how people see things, and really make you wonder about if people really do make their own misery - or happiness.
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