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Formats
Ebook Details
  • 01/2023
  • B0BSN7W57F
  • 326 pages
  • $5.99
Ourman: Book 1

Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

Ourman is the hero archetype turned on its head. It is the dissolution of a man lost among the crowds, compelled to fit in and to find his place in a world that has disappeared his life and love, family and friends, a collection of mysteries that is almost there but never quite. Ourman is the assembled personage trampling this experience, calling him to reimagine his purpose and inevitable influence on others. Ourman is the story of inspiration, the path of leadership, and its surprising consequences. This is the road less traveled. Ourman is buried in a fugue, an alien world he cannot navigate, a tremulous distortion of his home that he yearns to return to.
Reviews
Uth’s metaphysical interrogation of the hero’s journey blends riddling, fabulistic spiritual-quest storytelling with some pulp excitement and a strong current of literary pranksmanship—an introductory dedication insists that the story of the hero Ourman “is reimagined every fifty years,” that one prior vision of this was Joyce’s Finnegans Wake, and that this time the story will be “comprehensible.” That promise proves at least somewhat true, as for all the curveballs this novel chucks at them, patient readers who relish meta-fictional games will be able to follow what turns out to be the story of Steven Zaputz, a sociologist who along with his “regal” wife, long ago woke up as “blank slate”s in the woods.

The story picks up with Steven touring a walled city, following his wife’s itinerary, and then getting locked outside it, away from its crowds, left to find his own way in a “hilly and wholly unremarkable” desert. When he seems to make it back, he can find no trace of his wife—and he’s impressed into employment as a janitor. Then kidnapped, offered a promotion, given a new life in Kathmandu—and then Ourman ventures proudly beyond the summarizable.

And so it goes, the tale moves in quizzical spurts, with Steven vanishing—or does he?—from a narrative that rewards readers who labor to invest in its mysteries, its lengthy dialogues and poetic sprees, its sharp questions and shifts of perspective, and its introduction of a family who has always been “ready to assist Ourman in whatever form history has given him.” Uth’s world is abstract, at times to the point of vagueness, and the pleasures of the story don’t always measure up to the challenge of reading it. Still, the themes of cycles and some of the best moments—like one character’s definition of a cult—will rattle in the heads of the dedicated long after they finish.

Takeaway: This prankish, defiantly tricky novel interrogates the concept of the hero’s journey.

Great for fans of: B.S. Johnson’s Albert Angelo, Julio Cortázar’s Hopscotch.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: B+

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 01/2023
  • B0BSN7W57F
  • 326 pages
  • $5.99
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