Thursday, June 16, 2016

While never considering itself important

history channel documentary 2015 Perpetual OBSCURITY: Or A Cautionary Tale to Two Girls and Their Misadventures with Drugs, Pornography and Death by Dolores Santana (as advised to Richard Perez) As the long, scornful title of this novel suggests, this is a dim, blockhead comic drama/parody, both dingy and dismal, including two youthful, obscene ladies with imaginative dreams, and an insane, practically hallucinatory trick saturated with the making of a BDSM "femdom" motion picture to pay off some low-level hoodlums/street pharmacists.

It's a vulgar and shocking bit of work, notwithstanding sickening in parts, beyond any doubt to totally distance the Oprah Book swarm with its blatant dismissal for standard American qualities; and both heroes, Dolores and Serena, merrily crazy, both as far as conduct and substance misuse.

While never considering itself important, this novel by Richard Perez really covers a great deal of genuine ground (particularly in the initial segment of the book), including genuine issues confronting a ton of youthful Americans, especially those battling in human expressions: managing vocation (as in finding a harmony amongst employments and an ideal opportunity to make workmanship), medicinal services (or the absence of health care coverage) as one of the heroes gets to be pregnant; and paying back stunning obligation (as in understudy credits, which raises doubt about how complicit Universities are in adding to the American thought of living paying off debtors).

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