Skip to main content
The Housing Market: a comfortable place to jump off the end of the world

The Housing Market: a comfortable place to jump off the end of the world

Current price: $27.60
This product is not returnable.
Publication Date: March 3rd, 2013
Publisher:
Fomite
ISBN:
9781937677374
Pages:
616
Usually Ships in 2 to 5 Days

Description

In Joseph Reich's most recent social and cultural, contemporary satire of suburbia entitled, "The Housing market: a comfortable place to jump off the end of the world," the author addresses the absurd, postmodern elements of what it means, or for that matter not, to try and cope andfunction, and survive and thrive, or live and die in the repetitive and existential, futile and self-destructive, homogenized, monochromatic landscape of a brutal and bland, collective unconscious, which can spiritually result in a conflict and crisis of a desperate, disproportionate 'situational depression, ' triggering and leading the narrator to feel constantly abandoned and stranded, more concretely or proverbially spoken, "the eternal stranger," where when caught between the fight or flight psychological phenomena, naturally repels him and causes him to flee and return without him even knowing it into the wild, which by sudden circumstance andcoincidence discovers it surrounds the illusory-like circumference of these selfsame Monopoly board cul-de-sacs and dead ends... Most specifically, what can happen to a solitary, thoughtful and independent thinker when being stagnated in the triangulation of a cookie-cutter, oppressive culture of a homeowner's association he never ever really wanted when attempting to offer a piece of 'the absurd' American Dream to his wife who he loves and adores and never had it; when the house eventually goes on the market for its third, fourth, and fifth year of a collapsed and "depressed" economy; A memoir all written in critical and didactic, poetic stanzas and passages, and out of desperation, when freedom and control get taken, what he is forced to do in the illusion of 'free will and volition, ' something like the derivative art of an ironic and social, cultural satir.