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Popcorn: A Cautionary Tale

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Matt Roth is not happy. Both his marriage and his kids are failing, and his job is going nowhere. When he is told to work on the presidential campaign of an incredibly average but electable candidate, he nears his breaking point. But then he makes two pivotal groundbreaking technology that will convert Midwestern corn into cold fusion fuel and a plot to sell the Midwest to China.Matt is a marketing executive who is young enough to remember his youth and old enough to regret it. Much like his personal life, Matt lives in a fading America, a society devoid of ambition or purpose. His torment about his duty to an apathetic nation and his reluctance to take personal risks is much too tempting for his outrageous colleague, Lee Laugerfeld, to leave alone. Lee is a third generation movie producer with a questionable work ethic. He is the complete opposite of Matt. Not only is Lee entirely comfortable with the status quo, he takes ownership of it. He can justify pandering to an ignorant electorate on behalf of an irresponsible political machine with witty observations, “You see deep down we all know we cannot live off our past achievements forever. But in true American fashion we procrastinate, look wistfully into the camera and say, ‘Tomorrow is another day!’ We use the opiate of our trivial pursuits to sedate our nagging conscience. And you and I, my dear boy, are the drug dealers.” These astute, sardonic barbs irritate Matt but help him uncover personal truths about his family, his marriage, himself and his country. Through the story, Matt regains his lost sense of self and acquires the courage to control his destiny. Whether the nation follows suit remains to be seen.

197 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 30, 2015

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About the author

John Sharp

312 books4 followers
Librarian Note: There are more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

John R. Sharp worked as a linguist and analyst for the U.S. Government for over 40 years, teaching and writing curricula for Modern Standard Arabic and several Arabic dialects. During his studies in Cairo, he became fascinated with Egyptology and the ancient Egyptian language, but was frustrated at not finding a good, searchable index of pharaohs' cartouches (name rings), so he decided to make one himself, a project that took several decades. He lives in Hawaii.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
1 review
March 15, 2019
I loved this book and will definitely read the author’s next book. I bought this book when it was first introduced…but life was busy and I just now had a chance to read it. The book was interesting from the start, it kept my attention and had twists that were not predictable. The main character had CHARACTER, which is missing in many current stories. I enjoyed the ending and could see this book becoming a movie. Looking forward to the next book!
37 reviews
January 5, 2016
Good tale

Got to be political in the end but a good read. Has been wat too long since I finished it
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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