So great and well executed. Never goes too big, let's the very real absurdities speak for themselves and just cranks the strangeness up a little bit more so it's just right. Devoured this and want to read it again, in part just to see how much money Shaney gives people, including in free drinks, versus how much he takes in. The back of the book cites Chandler, Kafka, and Joyce as influences (I got Joyce in the ear for dialogue/dialect), and I think that's true, though in a more grounded American blue collar way, and I also really thought of Dostoevsky-- with so many characters on the fringes, Shaney Fleet walking among them, a working class Myshkin showing the absurdity if not impossibility of living "fairly" or "upright" or "honestly" in America, where the moral high ground is built on sinking foundations of trash and garage, the deeper you sink, the more it will cost you for the privilege. I think Dzanc has a ebook of this but let's get this back into print! It's too good not to be better known.