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Potlatch: A Comedy

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Have you ever wondered why life seems so complicated, so exhausting, so fattening, and yet so pointless and idiotic?

It's all part of the Potlatch.

To Alice Coggins, the 24-year-old daughter of a South Philadelphia scam artist, everything looks like a racket: endless serflike internships, student loans that can never be repaid, high-minded charities run by swindlers for the benefit of rich donors. Things only get worse when she meets Andrew Ogleby, a scion of blue-bloods who is engaged to a bulimic pet-food heiress he can't bring himself to marry.

As their Cinderella romance unfolds, Alice and Andrew must battle their families, the mob, and most of all the ubiquitous "Potlatch": a vast conspiracy of conspicuous waste directed by the powers that be to keep the populace -- and especially the young people -- from even thinking about doing anything useful.

"Get ready for a hilarious ride in Potlatch... One of the most amusing reads ever to be published.” -- Lisa McCombs for Readers’ Favorite Book Reviews.

231 pages, Kindle Edition

Published December 5, 2017

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About the author

Bruce Hartman

15 books45 followers
Bruce Hartman has worked as a pianist, bookseller and attorney. The author of twelve novels, he lives with his wife in Pennsylvania. He has been writing fiction for many years.

His latest book is his first western, LEGEND OF LOST BASIN, published in September 2024. Kirkus Reviews called it, "A riveting addition to the Western genre... Skillful storytelling and rich characterizations make this a must-read for fans of Westerns or those who just like good storytelling.," The book aims to transcend the western genre into the area of literary fiction.

Prior to that, his most recent book was THE PHILOSOPHICAL DETECTIVE'S LAST CASE, the third and final book of the Philosphical Detective Trilogy. The previous books are THE PHILOSOPHICAL DETECTIVE, published in 2014, and THE PHILOSOPHICAL DETECTIVE RETURNS, published in 2020. All three novels feature the iconic Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges wrestling with an extraordinary series of crimes and the equally baffling conundrums of literature and philosophy, including Zeno's paradoxes, the mind/body problem, and the mysteries of destiny, memory, personal identity and artistic creation. Kirkus Reviews called THE PHILOSOPHICAL DETECTIVE "a suspenseful, pitch-perfect novel.. an intelligent, original detective novel." Midwest Book Review rated THE PHILOSOPHICAL DETECTIVE RETURNS as "...highly recommended for classic detective story enthusiasts who look for complexity and intellectual challenges in their characters and stories."

Bruce Hartman's previous book, PAROLE, is a crime thriller in the tradition of Elmore Leonard about an unlikely pair of parolees from San Quentin struggling against the odds to recover their lives and fortunes in L.A. If it were a movie, it would probably be classified as an action/comedy/thriller. It has recently become available as an audiobook on Audible.

His first novel, PERFECTLY HEALTHY MAN DROPS DEAD, won the Salvo Press Mystery Novel Award and was published by Salvo Press in 2008. In 2018 it was reissued by Swallow Tail Press in a revised Tenth Anniversary Edition (both paperback and ebook).

Bruce Hartman's second book, THE RULES OF DREAMING, published by Swallow Tail Press in 2013, was awarded Kirkus Star for Books of Exceptional Merit. Kirkus Reviews called it "a mind-bending marriage of ambitious literary theory and classic murder mystery" and selected it as one of its "Top 100 Indie Books of 2013." Another mystery, THE MUSE OF VIOLENCE, was also published in 2013.

Bruce Hartman's seventh novel, POTLATCH: A Comedy, is a satirical comedy set in Philadelphia. Readers' Favorite Book Reviews called it "one of the most amusing reads ever to be published."

POTLATCH is the second entry in a projected trilogy which began with A BUTTERFLY IN PHILADELPHIA. Readers' Favorite Book Reviews called BUTTERFLY "one of the strange comic masterpieces that you're quite lucky to run across once in a very great while."

POTLATCH followed another comic novel, BIG DATA IS WATCHING YOU!, a satirical techno-dystopia set in a future in which the all-powerful force of Big Data rules humanity through the Internet of Things and the corporate power of the FANGs. It is the story of how one defiant customer foils the conspiracy to delete humanity from Google Earth. A slightly revised version of this book has also been published under the title, I AM NOT A ROBOT!

Bruce Hartman's eighth novel, a legal thriller entitled THE DEVIL'S CHAPLAIN, was published in 2018. This book tells the story of a young attorney, Charlotte Ambler, who volunteers to represent a death row inmate, a once-prominent biologist named Christopher Ritter, who asserts his innocence but doesn't regard his life as worth saving. Charlotte fights to save him in spite of himself as the clock ticks toward the execution date. In this gripping tale of deception and self-deception, betrayal and violence, lawyer and client find common ground in their quest for justice and human values.

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5 stars
11 (23%)
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13 (28%)
3 stars
14 (30%)
2 stars
7 (15%)
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1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for ♏ Gina☽.
856 reviews158 followers
July 1, 2020
The first thing that caught my eye was the first word in the title "Potlatch" as I knew the meaning of the word (a ceremony in which there is a lavish feast and the giving of gifts that is given by the indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest, including Canada and the U.S.)

The author has written a humorous satire here, and the reader needs to realize that this is satire before sitting down with the book and remember that.

Having said that, the situations described in this book will touch upon many of today's troubles: health care, politics, the environment, the power of the rich, etc. etc. etc.

As long as you go into this with the knowledge that it is satire, it's meant to poke fun at certain things while still bringing the issues to light, and you remember to laugh, you will enjoy this book.
Profile Image for Clarissa Simmens.
Author 35 books94 followers
December 8, 2017
Ah, South Philly: summer thighs stuck to plastic slip covers, pizza and Pat’s steaks instead of McD’s, Sinatra radio Friday nights in beauty parlors specializing in the Camar Jenny hair cut (shave up the back of the neck). South Philly, my birthplace and home for over two decades. And also the home of the Coggins family, Neanderthal-Americans per the latest DNA test, and founders of the newest political party. Dad on house arrest for life, Mom hating Dad, Tiffany hating sister Alice and Alice waitressing through a Wonderland of award dinners while falling in love.
Like Beckett’s arbitrary chaos of life, Bruce Hartman once again illustrates this as only he knows how to do: comedy, philosophical comedy, comic characters, and then, well, more comedy. If you ever wondered about the Neanderthal-American party, student loan debt and internships as a panacea for unemployment, non-profit profiteers, conspicuous consumption and/or the warehousing of the walking dead (who are, of course, on the voting rolls) then this is the explanation you have been waiting for.
Having read all of Hartman’s books, I revel in his ability to write Philosophical comedies without repeating himself. This is actually the second in a series (with different characters) yet quite original.
What of the book title? I initially learned the word “Potlatch” after reading a biography about the artist Emily Carr who painted totem poles in Canada and attended Native American potlatches, the giving away of possessions to enhance prestige. This will give you a story clue without spoilers
Hartman’s writing is so visual that I can imagine scenes in a movie (are the Colonial or Broadway theaters still in South Philly?); but somewhere along the way, the snorting and laughing from this exaggerated comedy ends and the reader suddenly realizes, in a disturbing way, that the antics are in the realm of real life. An entire philosophical cloud of doubt engulfs the now-serious reader concerning the true meaning of Hartman’s words. But in life, I have learned, a sense of humor can get us through some of the worst that life may have to offer. I would rather laugh than cry…
Profile Image for Rebecca.
69 reviews3 followers
November 7, 2019
This novel is told from several shifting points of view - action is told in first person from the protagonist, Alice, and third from that of several others in the large cast that peoples the story. Add in the "lecturer" voice which provides all the exposition on background material and this makes for an uneven narrative experience. Granted, it seems necessary: The writer has a lot to say about the nature of the world and what makes it go round, most of it wise and important. (He does, however, seem to have a basic misunderstanding of what the term "potlatch" meant to Native Americans, which kind of skews the point.) It is reasonably good satire on wealth and its distribution, which excuses a few cookie-cutter characters and fantastical events, coming out satisfying over all.
Profile Image for John Nondorf.
327 reviews
June 1, 2019
It has its moments--I definitely laughed out loud at some things, but this book just tries to pack in too much satire/social commentary for any of it to be really effective. I wasn't fond of the constant derision toward education and the "punching down" (e.g. mocking homeless people).
It also bothered me that Hartman appropriated a Native American term for his title and used it frequently throughout the book without acknowledging its origin.
Author 43 books36 followers
May 29, 2018
This is a finely tuned black comedy with tight plotting and sharp humor. The characters are delightfully and maniacally quirky and flawed and the pace is swift. I have read all of Hartman's books. He is a great satirist and writer. I would read a book by him even if it was about a flippant turnip. Highly recommend!!
436 reviews
September 28, 2018
Potlatch

This is a crazy, wild story of a group of characters all trying to live with and exist in the potlatch. Alice is the daughter of a scheming father on house arrest. She works unpaid internships like most of the people her age. She discovers the potlatch and is trying to figure it out. A funny, wild ride
117 reviews1 follower
January 2, 2019
As with my review of "Butterfly in Philadelphia", this followup by Mr. Hartman was also enjoyable for its colorful characters and comedic touch. This one also had a bit more cutting social commentary than the first, which I enjoyed. That said, I just wasn't as enamored with this one as the first book.
Profile Image for Laura Larson.
292 reviews13 followers
February 9, 2019
I feel like I NEED the next book now. As in book 1, there were so many threads it was at times difficult to keep up. In the end, I was amazed to see the finely woven and intricate tapestry left behind me. Almost dystopian instead of satirical, with a bit of modern day fairy tale and a lot of conspiracy theory.
Profile Image for Ruth.
368 reviews21 followers
March 7, 2018
Well written view of the inner workings of social systems and political clockwork of being unemployed officially and governmental support systems enhancing the "deserving". "Tongue in cheek" has adhered itself to the side of the oral cavity and is self-grafting.
Profile Image for Kim Hamilton.
119 reviews1 follower
November 17, 2018
Next....

Can wait for book 3, so far such a fun, quirky series.
Great characters abound, unlikely scenarios are hysterical..
Recommended for some alternative reading.
Profile Image for Nancie Lafferty.
1,585 reviews11 followers
June 3, 2019
Social commentary via hectic comedy in South Philly; this book was a hoot.
Profile Image for Clipinchick.
617 reviews37 followers
Want to read
March 16, 2018
I received this book for free from the author/publisher in response for an honest review of the book. I have not had the opportunity to read this book at this time. I will add my
review of this book once I have read the book. Thank k you for allowing me the optometrist review your work. I look forward to reading this book.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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