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Since the Layoffs by Iain Levison — book cover

Since the Layoffs

by Iain Levison
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Overview

From the author of the critically acclaimed memoir, A Working Stiff’s Manifesto, comes this darkly entertaining first novel. Jake Skowran has been laid off from his job as a factory supervisor. The work he is offered is a lot less than legal, but he has little choice except to take it. He is going to carve off a piece of the economy or die trying.

"Levison is the real deal . . . bracing, hilarious and dead on."—The New York Times Book Review

Synopsis

A dark comedy by the author of A Working Stiff's Manifesto.

USA Today

The novel is written with the same kind of deadpan humor Levison used so well in his first book, A Working Stiff's Manifesto, an account of 42 jobs he worked in a decade after college. Since the Layoffs is no manifesto and manages to balance humor and anger in a story that's oddly engrossing. — Bob Minzesheimer

About the Author, Iain Levison

Iain Levison is the author of A Working Stiff's Manifesto, an account of his post-collegiate work experience, consisting of forty-two jobs in ten years, and two novels, Since the Layoffs and Dog Eats Dog. He lives in Raleigh, North Carolina.

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Editorials

The New York Times

Iain Levison tells this satirical tale of a Michigan factory worker's transformation into a hit man with a tough, wisecracking tone that will be familiar to readers of his memoir A Working Stiff's Manifesto, in which he hilariously detailed his 42-job work history. — Max Winter

USA Today

The novel is written with the same kind of deadpan humor Levison used so well in his first book, A Working Stiff's Manifesto, an account of 42 jobs he worked in a decade after college. Since the Layoffs is no manifesto and manages to balance humor and anger in a story that's oddly engrossing. — Bob Minzesheimer

Kirkus Reviews

A black comedy about an unemployed factory worker who becomes a hit man, by the author of A Working Stiff's Manifesto (2002). Like many others in his blue-collar Wisconsin town, Jake Skowran worked for the tractor factory until management went south and found Mexicans to do the same jobs for seven bucks a day. Laid off, Jake took a job as a convenience-store clerk that barely paid enough to keep him alive. So he started gambling to pick up extra cash-and soon owed over $4,000. His bookie Ken Gardocki had a good heart, however, and he'd known Jake a long time, so he cut him a deal: Jake could wipe out his debt if he murdered Ken's unfaithful wife for him. Happy to oblige, Jake found killing a lot easier than he expected-so easy, in fact, that later he bumped off his store manager just for the thrill of it. Then he traveled to New York on assignment to dispatch an AIDS patient who needed to die of unnatural causes (so his boyfriend could collect insurance), and he even knocked off an undercover cop who'd begun asking too many questions about him and Ken. When the police eventually take notice and call Jake in for questioning, he holds to his story (Ken had provided solid alibis for both of them), and they can't pin anything on him. In the course of his dealings with the cops, Jake meets and falls in love with Officer Sheila Zadow, who knows that Ken is a small-time mobster but believes Jake is innocent. Jake even takes her "on vacation" to Miami, where Ken has sent him to whack his late wife's lover. What better cover can a hit man have than a cop for a girlfriend? But love has had a bad effect on Jake: it gives him something to live for-almost as bad as having a conscience. A witty, deft,well-conceived tale that combines sharp satire with real suspense.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2003
Publisher
Soho Press, Incorporated
Pages
176
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781569473351

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