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The Dishwasher

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
WINNER OF THE AMAZON CANADA FIRST NOVEL AWARD
  • NOMINATED FOR CANADA READS
  • A NEW YORK TIMES NEW & NOTEWORTHY BOOK
  • A NOW MAGAZINE BEST BOOK TO READ FOR SUMMER 2019
  • As heard on CBC's The Sunday Edition with Michael Enright

    It's October in Montreal, 2002, and winter is coming on fast. Past due on his first freelance gig and ensnared in lies to his family and friends, a graphic design student with a gambling addiction goes after the first job that promises a paycheck: dishwasher at the sophisticated La Trattoria. Though he feels out of place in the posh dining room, warned by the manager not to enter through the front and coolly assessed by the waitstaff in their tailored shirts, nothing could have prepared him for the tension and noise of the kitchen, or the dishpit's clamor and steam. Thrust on his first night into a roiling cast of characters all moving with the whirlwind speed of the evening rush, it's not long before he finds himself in over his head once again. A vivid, magnificent debut, with a soundtrack by Iron Maiden, The Dishwasher plunges us into a world in which everyone depends on each other—for better and for worse.

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      • Kirkus

        April 1, 2019
        A Québécois bestseller thankfully arrives for English readers. One can see how this bleak bildungsroman attracted so much attention in Canada, despite the nihilism it wears on its sleeve, because it captures a singular voice as well as the blood, sweat, and tears of life in the trenches of a restaurant kitchen. Larue's debut novel, translated from the French by Strauss, reads like a cross between the dearly departed Anthony Bourdain and Stephanie Danler's Sweetbitter, combining the complicated life of a kitchen wretch with a highly literate voice. It's also complicated by a narrator who's deeply troubled but endlessly fascinating in the manner of the Beats' beautiful losers. Stéphane, an artist, college student, metal head, and inveterate gambler, who shares the name of his creator, is a loser by any definition of the word. He's screwed friends, relatives, and a death metal band called Deathgaze over an album cover for which he's been paid thousands but gambled away. At the behest of his compassionate cousin, Malik, our narrator gets his shit together enough to get a job as a dishwasher at a high-end Montreal restaurant. Stéphane's tales of his struggles with addiction are as dizzying as any alcoholic memoir, while his drunken adventures--with a crew that includes his mentor and enabler, Bébert; a flat-out criminal named Greg; the ex he sort-of pines after; and other archetypal characters that flit in and out of his orbit--are captivating. "Nothing ever works out for me," Stéphane moans to Bébert one night, and while it's worth it to see if that's true in the end, watching him screw up over and over is hypnotizing all by itself; Stéphane's arc toward self-destruction is outright malignant. A few shattering days in the life of a broken and desperate young man.

        COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      • Kirkus

        April 1, 2019
        A Qu�b�cois bestseller thankfully arrives for English readers. One can see how this bleak bildungsroman attracted so much attention in Canada, despite the nihilism it wears on its sleeve, because it captures a singular voice as well as the blood, sweat, and tears of life in the trenches of a restaurant kitchen. Larue's debut novel, translated from the French by Strauss, reads like a cross between the dearly departed Anthony Bourdain and Stephanie Danler's Sweetbitter, combining the complicated life of a kitchen wretch with a highly literate voice. It's also complicated by a narrator who's deeply troubled but endlessly fascinating in the manner of the Beats' beautiful losers. St�phane, an artist, college student, metal head, and inveterate gambler, who shares the name of his creator, is a loser by any definition of the word. He's screwed friends, relatives, and a death metal band called Deathgaze over an album cover for which he's been paid thousands but gambled away. At the behest of his compassionate cousin, Malik, our narrator gets his shit together enough to get a job as a dishwasher at a high-end Montreal restaurant. St�phane's tales of his struggles with addiction are as dizzying as any alcoholic memoir, while his drunken adventures--with a crew that includes his mentor and enabler, B�bert; a flat-out criminal named Greg; the ex he sort-of pines after; and other archetypal characters that flit in and out of his orbit--are captivating. "Nothing ever works out for me," St�phane moans to B�bert one night, and while it's worth it to see if that's true in the end, watching him screw up over and over is hypnotizing all by itself; St�phane's arc toward self-destruction is outright malignant. A few shattering days in the life of a broken and desperate young man.

        COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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