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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Humorous / General
  • Language:English
  • Pages:372
  • eBook ISBN:9781483515830

The Fringe Dwellers

by Joseph M. Williams

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
Christian and Laura can’t stay together, but yet can’t stay apart. They’ve broken up over drinking too much of the juice from a Slurpee and handing back a cup of ice and after arguing who loves the other more. The Fringe Dwellers comically explores what happens when you can’t stop breaking up with the person you’re destined to be stuck with for the rest of your life and how the lives and relationships of an oddball array of characters (an ex-girlfriend/grade school nemesis, an uptight lawyer best friend, a therapist with her own mental health issues, a 400 pound cab driver who used to be 800 pounds, a faded country singer attempting a comeback after drug rehab and several misguided appearances on celebrity reality shows, a pot-smoking, sarcastic fourteen year-old, dysfunctional parents going through a divorce and the cranky and malevolent downstairs landlord) impact Christian and Laura’s relationship.
Description
The Fringe Dwellers is an offbeat, darkly quirky comedy about a couple (Christian and Laura) that constantly breaks up and gets back together. At the start of the novel, they’ve broken up nine times already. Well, ten if you count the time Laura broke up with Christian and he didn't realize it because he thought she was just out of town. Their love story is disrupted by the presence of Christian’s grade school nemesis and first love, Susan. Susan and Christian were always more intense than anyone else in their grade. During naptime, they were the only ones who used an abacus to count sheep. Susan is currently dating Christian’s best friend Mark, a lawyer at a very prestigious law firm – they don’t even advertise on television. Giving Christian advice are his 400 pound cab driver friend, Abu, who used to be over 800 pounds and his therapist friend, Thelma, who has issues of her own. Complicating things is the presence of Christian’s ex-girlfriend, Cindy Lou Hurtsong, a faded country singer attempting a comeback after drug rehab, a presidential affair and several misguided appearances on celebrity reality shows. Her stage name is actually Cindy Mae Hurtsong. She decided to record under the name Cindy Mae instead of Cindy Lou because she thought the name Cindy Lou made her sound too much like a hick. Throw in Laura’s fourteen year old pot-smoking niece, Christian’s battling parents who wrap each other’s Christmas presents every year in half-filled out divorce papers and Mean Old Miss Bostwick, Christian’s malevolent downstairs landlord who prefers Tasering tenants rather than going through the hassle of filling out eviction notices and it becomes a question of whether love can overcome all the complications life throws at it.
About the author
Joseph M. Williams is currently an Associate Professor of Psychology at Illinois Wesleyan University, specializing in the area of Behavioral Neuroscience. Not necessarily the funniest of professions, but there you have it. In his spare time, Joseph enjoys comedy improv performing and comedy sketch writing. You can find other comedy writing samples on his website: www.josephmwilliams.com