Book Review: Business As Usual by David Mazzotta, A Corporate Farce
Published April 19, 2006
"Usual" in this caged menagerie of office characters means an urbane, cynical, money-hungry, bored lifestyle. Like any big business environment it can be tough to care about the people populating Business As Usual. It's author and Blogcritic contributor, David Mazzotta, designed these employees of Can-Am consulting well. The strongest emotion here is detachment, which is a vivid contrast to the David M. Kelley-like layered craziness of the book. The plot of blackmail and embezzlement, relating to an Employee of the Year betting scheme gone wrong, purposefully builds to farce. There are elements that deserve to be embedded in the surface of the Farce Freeway of Fame.
In the novel, we are quickly introduced to an unhappy, tense, rote office environment through the tired, enduring voices of Jim, Jake, Aubrey and others. All feel the same sense of hamster wheeling, but for different reasons. All loathe the leader of the pack, the Decrepitude, but for very similar reasons.
Talking about his customers, Jake the aging "management guru" star of the company, also describes the way all the book's populous lives:
If any of them had taken the time to think things through they would have realized that all they got for their money were vague suggestions couched in highly imperative rhetoric and supported by whatever prefabricated conclusions could be justified from any actual data they may have had handy."
If you don't "buy in" you tune out and stick with middle of the road even as you buy into your own delusion of moneyed success.
Most of the characters by the end of the book realize that despite their clever clothes and smart smirks, they're really just fiercely disillusioned slackers at heart. Does that make the slackers more enlightened in a "It's better to have loved ..." sense? Mazzotto makes the argument.
Because of an internal loop error of not being able to care, it is hard to read any great truths or import into the book. In other words, so complete is the picture of a typical metro-corporation, its heavy-water humidity sucks out a lot of the energy. Reading the book, you feel silly if you even start to care about anything. Business As Usual is a midnight snack. Not nutritious or filling but the indulgence satisfies for the exact time it takes to consume it. The book does help you believe what is at its storytelling core, that it's not the destination that matters, it is the witty, jumbled, messy, journey that gets you there.
Looking quickly back, I first felt this review should have been longer, that it should have told more about the thoughts, the voices of each character. Audrey is the Decrepitude's daughter, a Paris Hilton-like character, but smarter and less spoiled. Jake is successful but the midlife crisis has finally hit him, a decade or so late. Jim is the central character, and he really wants to do nothing more than nothing. And to have sex with Fifi.
- Book Review: Business As Usual by David Mazzotta, A Corporate Farce
- Published: April 19, 2006
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Culture: Business and Economics, Books: Literature and Fiction, Culture: Humor and Satire
- Writer: Temple Stark
- Temple Stark's BC Writer page
- Temple Stark's personal site
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