A raucous stand-up comedian gets his first taste of fame as he struggles with alcoholism and anxiety in this debut novel.
Twenty-five-year-old Jon Anderson has been performing in Denver comedy clubs for years, but the venues and the pay are not always great. (“The ambience of dirty feet, burnt whiskey, and sadness lingered in the air!”) As he accepts a crinkled $20 bill for his latest set—a rambling diatribe about dating, drinking, and enduring one-night-stand impotence—he stresses about his social anxiety. This keeps him drinking, which keeps him in bars, where he has a run-in with a homeless guy who claims he can get Jon gigs. Miraculously, the new contact follows through, and Jon opens for a renowned comedian at a premier club. As the gigs keep coming, the local recognition turns into national bookings, more zeroes in the bank account, and a relationship with a model named Trixy Wells. The two fall in love, but Trixy’s got a jet-setting lifestyle and a penchant for infidelity. Jon is wracked with indecision about the relationship, but Trixy swears she’s dedicated to him. Drunk, love-struck, and becoming more famous, Jon travels to Scotland to perform at the Edinburgh Fringe, where he has to decide just how much of a role Trixy can play in his life. Brown’s anxiety-riddled, alcohol-fueled story is written in a stream-of-consciousness style that is fervent, funny, and obsessed with picking apart the self-doubt and worry that drive Jon’s stand-up act. The comedy monologues themselves are written at the same fever pitch as the rest of the novel, with Jon’s brain never really quieting down. The book’s raw, irreverent energy is appealing. Acclaim and wealth come a bit too easily to Jon, but the mental issues he confronts are fierce adversaries.
An engaging, impassioned, frenzied tale of a comedian on the way up facing thorny challenges.