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The Thought Gang [Paperback]

Tibor Fischer
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Paperback, Sep 9 1997 --  

Book Description

Sep 9 1997
Entertaining and often dazzling, this is Tibor Fischer’s second novel. Under the Frog won the Betty Trask Award and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.

A black comedy in the grand tradition of word-drunk intellectuals-en-dementia, The Thought Gang follows the larcenous adventures of blackout alcoholic philosopher Eddie Coffin who, in the wake of scandal, flees his professorship in England to begin the next logical step in his career: robbery.

Coffin and his new partner in crime and metaphysics, Hubert the one-armed robber, roadtrip across the Continent in a spree of crime and epistemology, arguing a cracked history of Western philosophy and plumbing the meaning of life.

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A black comedy in the grand tradition of word-drunk intellectuals-en-dementia, The Thought Gang follows the larcenous adventures of blackout alcoholic philosopher Eddie Coffin, who, in the wake of scandal, flees his professorship in England to begin the next logical step in his career: robbery. Coffin and his new partner in crime and metaphysics, Hubert the one-armed armed robber, road-trip across the Continent in a spree of crime and epistemology, arguing a cracked history of Western philosophy and plumbing the meaning of life. Fischer was named by Granta as one of the best young British novelists of 1994; his first novel, Under the Frog, was a Booker Prize semifinalist. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

From Publishers Weekly

A fat, middle-aged British philosopher turns glutton, slacker, embezzler and thief in Fischer's second novel (after Under the Frog), an infectiously immoral tale about bank robbery in contemporary France. We meet Greek philosophy don Eddie Coffin as he goes on the lam from Cambridge, where, to avoid what he despises above all?work?he has stolen the funds of a Japanese foundation, stashing them in a suitcase. Not far from Lyon, a car accident sends his carefully cached funds up in smoke, leaving him one choice: to rob banks, a trade he learns under the tutelage of crippled thug Hubert. Together, the duo are drunk, lazy and violent, but in such an innocent way that it's hard to begrudge them their subsequent fantastic run of bank-robbing luck. Coffin's stylized first-person narration (numbered in sections, like a philosophical treatise) can be grating, but eventually even wisecracks about Epictetus and Zeno?as well as Coffin's unexplained fascination with words that begin with the letter Z?become part of the fun. The juxtaposition of egghead metaphysics and juvenile gangster fantasy is summed up in the line, "The thing about a gun is, it's like being on the right side of a Socratic dialogue." Often complex in structure, incorporating flashbacks of Coffin's old friends and family to touching effect, this jaunty novel is fundamentally an exercise in wish-fulfillment: shoot guns, get cash, spend it on French food.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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First Sentence
The only advice I can offer, should you wake up vertiginously in a strange flat, with a thoroughly installed hangover, without any of your clothing, without any recollection of how you got there, with the police sledgehammering down the door to the accompaniment of excited dogs, while you are surrounded by bales of lavishly-produced magazines featuring children in adult acts, the only advice I can offer is to try be good-humoured and polite. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Fischer at his best July 30 2002
Format:Hardcover
My favorite work by Fischer. I can't say anything about this that hasn't been stated already- I just wanted to add my two cents. I love this novel. I've read it four times since I first picked it up in '99. It is whimsical, hilarious, poignant, original and (best of all) a completely dead on send up of academic philosophy/ers. Experience in point: as an (philo)undergrad, I lent my copy to all my favorite philo profs. Only one of them thanked me. And he didn't return it. Even if you don't dig on the love 'o wisdom bag- you will laugh out loud at this book. And his other novels as well (though I will say, if you are a female- you may like Under The Frog or The Collector Collector, better- I've noticed a trend that way, with my female friends who ask for good reads).
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Format:Paperback
Quite frankly, this book is wasted on a culture that celebrates Oprah, "Friends," and everything Bruckheimer. It's too good of a book to be put in the same strip malls that cough up today's entertainment and it knows it.

The dialogue is fierce, the characters are sharp, and the narration is spot on. Oh, and it's funny as hell. That explains, of course, why you've never heard of it.

Were there any justice, this book would be required reading. It could serve as the litmus test for some sort of bare-minimum competency test where if you dare said "I don't get it" more than twice, or didn't laugh at least once per page, they would strip you of voting rights, citizenship, and dignity. But, no. Instead those are the people who head corporations, reguarly attend focus groups, and wind up featured in the latest edition of People.

Oh well.

It's a good book.

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Format:Paperback
Eddie Coffin is a second rate professor of philosophy with many troubles--the bottle, authority, remembering his name, and so on. Immersed in a mini sexual scandal, he flees to France, joins fortunes with another interesting social outcast, and begins a life of crime.

Essentially a commentary on social disaffection and anomie, Fischer cleverly shrouds his consideration of general social ills in a skewed, aberrant, yet extremely entertaining veil of philosophical didactics between the partners in crime.

The key here is character development as the plot, such as it is, remains minimal throughout the novel. The characters are fully capable of carrying the day, however.

All in all a very good, if somewhat lightweight (for Fischer, anyway), effort.

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Most recent customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Get the zet.
Get the zet. Actually if you don't "get the zet," don't read this book. Littered with obscure philosophical references and amusing anecdotes about the Ionians, this is... Read more
Published on Sep 26 2001 by Adam Missner
4.0 out of 5 stars Zonked
What can i say? Quite a caper, quite an adventure, and quite a dictionary of Zs at the back. Fischer's novel is a riot and as irreverent and confusing as philosophers go. Read more
Published on Jun 28 2001 by spideranansie
4.0 out of 5 stars Zig-zags with zing and zip
Ostensibly, this book is about a pair of bank robbers whose robberies are based on various schools of philosophical thought (the positivist view: "I'm positive I want to rob... Read more
Published on Oct 18 2000 by Mike Stone
2.0 out of 5 stars A real slam shutter
A real shame,this looks to be an interesting fun ride but each and every paragraph contains a landmine of nauseating overcleverness which quickly turns the story into a frustrating... Read more
Published on Oct 9 2000 by Pro Reader
5.0 out of 5 stars Cliches are the truths we're bored with....
Tibor Fischer is one of the best writers on the planet -consistently hilarious, fiercely inventive and possessed of thatintuitive insight which makes you think - "Of course! Read more
Published on April 7 2000 by GZA
5.0 out of 5 stars Filosofía a mano armada
He leído este libro en español y francamente pienso que resulta sumamente atrayente porque nos da cuenta perfecta de sus personajes envueltos en una maraña... Read more
Published on Jan 25 2000 by Hernan Arista
4.0 out of 5 stars Too much Zeds?
I loved this book - recomended by my good buddy Tavernello, p.s. thank you Tave - but i don't know if the Z-words filrouge was really necessary. Read more
Published on Jan 7 2000 by Simone Zancani
3.0 out of 5 stars Occaisonally Fun, But Not Wholly Satisfying
The premise is good: A drunken fraud of a Cambridge philosophy professor flees to France with stolen funds, promptly loses them all, and falls in with an odd young French bank... Read more
Published on Sep 10 1999 by A. Ross
4.0 out of 5 stars Tibor, U cold do so much better
This book does have several strengths in that it is eminently readable and outrageously funny. To complain seems a bit curmudgeonly but in the end there isn't much here. Read more
Published on Aug 15 1999
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely perfect!
A friend recommended this book to me along with the assurance that I would have the time of my life...now I'm passing the advice along to you! Don't delay! Read more
Published on July 11 1999
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