Join My Cult

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Join My Cult  
Author(s) James Curcio
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Satire, Novel
Publisher New Falcon Publications
Publication date November 2004
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 256 pp
ISBN 1-56184-173-0
OCLC Number 150358223

Join My Cult is a subversive, satirical novel written by James Curcio and released by New Falcon Publications (publisher of some notable counter-culture authors such Robert Anton Wilson, Timothy Leary, and Aleister Crowley). It is a work of collaborative fiction based on real events. In a subsequent interview the author said the book was meant to be a prologue for his second novel, Fallen Nation: Babylon Burning.[1]

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Many have likened Join My Cult!'s non-linear or cut-up style to Thomas Pynchon, William Burroughs, and Robert Anton Wilson. Also like the works of these authors, there have been heated debates about its cultural value or lack thereof.[2]

Various plot elements focus on groups of suburban kids experimenting with shamanism and hallucinogens, who quickly discover themselves unhinged from the culture around them. It details events surrounding their harrowing plunge into this abyss, regularly shifting narrator and frame of reference from one member of the group to the other. Curcio utilizes atypical narrative and grammatical structures in the form of neurolinguistic and hypnotic confusion techniques within the text in an effort to stimulate a similar experience over the course of reading. That Curcio was intentionally utilizing these techniques is shown in various interviews such as a Gpod radio interview found on his website.[3]

[edit] Reviews

The book received a positive review from Jive Magazine.[4]

[edit] About the author

Born Jamie Curcio (July 9, 1978, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), Curcio has published numerous novels, graphic novels, essays, albums and podcasts independently as well as through Disinfo, New Falcon, Alterati, Key 64, JIVE Magazine, Immanion Press, and New Fiction. Many of these projects use heavily applied viral marketing, and deal with issues relating to myth, consciousness and identity.[5]

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Freq23 Interview[dead link]
  2. ^ e.g. Ashe Journal Review.
  3. ^ Gpod Interview with Joseph Matheny
  4. ^ Jive Magazine review
  5. ^ Reality Sandwich Interview

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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