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Pharoni

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When the body of Harry Injurides – playwright, provocateur and bodybuilder – washes up on a beach, his friends are shocked, but not altogether surprised. But when they meet to mourn Harry, he shows up and says he’s been resurrected. Pharoni is the story of those friends. Tommy Pharoni tries to overcome his shock by writing about his friend’s resurrection, and accidentally starts a religion. Roy Sudden starts a tech empire based on digital empathy and digital pain, drawing in billionaire investors, femme-fatale programmers, and tsunamis of capital. And, Roy’s on-again, off-again girlfriend Maud works in secret to bring radical justice to the most neglected and abused corners of society. As Tommy’s religion grows, Roy and his backers try to take control of it. The battle, about more than doctrine, engulfs Tommy’s marriage and threatens his life, leading to a conflict with strangely humane results that no one could predict. Notable 100 Book – Shelf Unbound’s Best Books of the Year List Finalist – Reader Views’ Annual Fiction Award Quarterfinalist – ScreenCraft Cinematic Book Competition WHAT PEOPLE
“Completely fresh and utterly surprising, Pharoni is an off-the-wall novel that will keep you scratching your head until the last unpredictable scene.” – INDIES TODAY (5/5 STARS) “(T)he storyline itself is ingeniously mysterious… miraculous spectacles in quick succession… sharply limns… the spirit of New York … provocatively mocking the ambition of artists…” – KIRKUS “(O)riginal and thrilling… a supremely intelligent work of explorative and experimental fiction that deserves a place amongst the best of indie sci-fi that I’ve read this year… a strong thriller plot… the high impact of a mainstream dystopian masterpiece….” – READERS’ FAVORITE (5/5 STARS) “Filled with fascinating ideas… technology transmitting pain… that a modern-day religion would be subsumed into corporate “wellness” … he writes about them with zest” – INDIE READER “A mercurial story that takes many satisfyingly surprising twists and turns… religious, social, psychological, and criminal processes come to life… intrigue and wry humor… a strange journey, indeed.” – MIDWEST BOOK REVIEW “ A literary masterpiece that will have readers questioning everything they ever believed about wealth and religion.” – READER VIEWS (5/5 STARS) “ Pharoni , with its philosophical and social commentary, shows the face of the world that we often ignore… captures readerly attention until the very end.” – INDEPENDENT BOOK REVIEW “(W)ith vivid characters. Pharoni offers modern day parallels to the founding of Christianity… it forces you to take a look at this fellowship of friends” – THE NEW PODLER REVIEW OF BOOKS “(U)nconventional… Dodds’ prose is a delight… Pharoni is not a bleak book… thought-provoking and intelligent and one to contemplate” – SCUFFED GRANNY “Once you begin reading Dodds you will want to keep going. His style, his turns of speech and his continuous plot twists sustain and engage.” – FLOYD COUNTY MOONSHINE “Simmering lyricism and a killer ending from its last sentence also add to the novel’s charm… a fine read!” – Eileen Tabios, Award-Winning Author of A Fairy Tale for Our Times “Loved it! Pharoni is a wacky, wonderfully written sci fi novel with themes of technology, opportunism, art and cults. I struggled to put this down… I would highly recommend this book to any fans of Andy Weir and Kazuo Ishiguro’s books. ” – Eilish Shovelin, REEDSY

379 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 20, 2022

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About the author

Colin Dodds

26 books97 followers
Colin Dodds is an award-winning author and filmmaker, whose works include Pharoni, Ms. Never and The 6th Finger of Tommy the Goose. He grew up in Massachusetts and lived in California briefly, before finishing his education in New York City. Since then, he’s made his living as a journalist, editor, copywriter and video producer. His work has appeared in Gothamist, The Washington Post and more than three hundred other publications, and been praised by luminaries such as David Berman and Norman Mailer. Forget This Good Thing I Just Said, a first-of-its-kind literary and philosophical experience (the book form of which was a finalist for the Big Other Book Prize for Nonfiction), is available as an app for the iPhone. He lives in New York City, with his wife and children.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for David.
Author 5 books38 followers
October 1, 2022
Told in the first person, Pharoni has the feel of a memoir or a really long confession. Tommy Pharoni is a struggling screenplay writer who pays his bills and alimony by working a soulless marketing job. His closest friends were aspiring artists of different sorts in college. Now in their mid-thirties, they've set aside those aspirations to "adult" properly. All except for Harry, whose death opens the story. Harry struggled to fit into contemporary society, instead preferring to help the homeless while penning "words of wisdom" in his many notebooks. After his death and subsequent re-birth, those notebooks wound up in Tommy's possession. Ultimately, Tommy would collect them into a coherent manuscript and seek out a way to get them published.

As Tommy is a screenwriter, the format of the story periodically shifts into screenplay mode. This works particularly well for conversations as it affords opportunity to get to know the other characters through their dialogue rather than relying on Tommy's narrative. I wouldn't say Tommy is an unreliable narrator, but he does limit what we can learn about what's going on elsewhere with other characters. References to things that have been written elsewhere and NDAs force the reader to fill in the gaps.

After Harry's resurrection, the lives of Tommy and his friends change as described in the blurb, but there's so much more. The group of friends find themselves splattered by the seven deadly sins, fitting for a story where a religion is founded upon the philosophical musings of a character that has died and miraculously resurrected days later. At least Christianity didn't get partnered with a health and wellness brand. The corrupting influence of millions and billions of dollars seeps its way into their lives and rots them from within. What is friendship worth? Can you put a dollar amount on it?

If there's one overarching theme that I can take away from this tale, it's that power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Keeping this spoiler free, I'll say that Tommy started out as a character that I could connect with to someone I didn't want anything to do with. But I stuck with him because act two opens with:
This is where I get unrelatable, maybe even unlikable. As the writer of failed screenplays, I know what a mortal sin unlikability can be.
That gave me hope for him in act three. But Tommy is far from the only person to be corrupted by power. It's everyone up to the very end of the story. And the only characters whose souls are left intact are those who never possess it.

Colin Dodds has crafted an excellent morality play with vivid characters. Pharoni offers modern day parallels to the founding of Christianity, right down to the Christmas star, but in an age of unbridled capitalism. If you're old enough, with all of the life experience that implies, it forces you to take a look at this fellowship of friends and how they sacrificed art and friendship for wealth and power and check to make sure that this isn't a mirror of your own life.
Profile Image for Scuffed Granny.
347 reviews14 followers
August 20, 2022
This book, for me, was a curious read. It made me think on many levels and I am hoping that this is what Colin Dodds had in mind when he wrote it.

Told in the first person, our narrator is Tommy Pharoni who relates to us the development of his life, which is deeply influenced, even manufactured, by the death of his friend, Harry. Actually, it is more Harry's reappearance in the land of the living which is the catalyst for the alteration to Tommy's previously quite staid and humble existence into one where he has status and influence, although he learns that this can be a fragile thing.

The novel begins with a group of friends losing one of their number, the aforementioned Harry to what appears to be suicide. Many questions are raised as to why Harry may have left this world, when he is suddenly spotted in the flesh, so to speak, and this prompts even more enquiry and debate.

The friendship group consists of Harry and Tommy as mentioned and Andrew, his sister Maud, Roy and Theo. All seem to be surviving rather than thriving except for Maud, who has a career in insurance but Harry's death and the furore that develops around it propels them all into territories unknown. Their lives then become influenced by external pressures and expectations that threaten to tear them apart as friends as well as creating fractures in their own individual existences.

Dodds chooses to have a lot of his dialogue written as a play with stage directions; as Tommy is an aspiring screenwriter, this is apt as well as adding something to the whole feel of the book as something unconventional, mirroring the fact that it deals in ideas that are at times philosophical and at others, disturbing to contemplate.

This book is not challenging to read as Dodds' prose is a delight. There were certain sentences that I mulled over, like a good wine, repeating them in my head for what they conjured and how they had been crafted. However, it is challenging in the ideas that it proposes about religion and its possible exploitation, and greed and control.

Pharoni is not a bleak book - Tommy's narration helps this - but it is certainly not an uplifting read. Thought-provoking and intelligent and one to contemplate on when finished.

I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
Profile Image for Kat M.
5,194 reviews18 followers
June 3, 2022
this was a really well done science fiction novel, it was a beautifully done plot and I was hooked from the first page.

I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
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