
A Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year
Herbert Horatio "Poppy" Blackwell was once a daring aviator, an illustrious movie producer, and a brilliant businessman. A Howard Hughes-like mogul, Poppy has become a recluse with paralyzing fears of infection. Cloistered in the penthouse high above his desert gambling empire, he is attended by a small army of maids and footmen and lawyers and physicians, who live in a state of constant surveillance as they cater to his eccentric, paranoid demands."Funny, twisted and refreshingly grim . . . part Philip K. Dick [and] part Todd Haynes." --Time Out (New York)
"Reminiscent of other satirical fables, from George Orwell's 1984 to Donald Antrim's black-comic Elect Mr. Robinson for a Better World . . . Louse sticks to you for its wit and imaginative vision." --The New York Times Book Review "Creepy, poetic and funny . . . [Louse] exerts a hold as undeniable as it is indecipherable." --Los Angeles Times "Splendid . . . A nervily funny addition to the shelf of great amnesia fiction." --Jonathan Lethem