This second piece in the tragic triad begins at the initial steps of a new millennium promising a busy and unrelenting future. The scene framed in a big city, filled with many forms of survival and human inevitability constantly maligned and degraded into recent history, while it struggling against the imminent demise... Anyway... This mid twenties character, (regardless of generational stereotype) aches against the preconceived absorption of life and its disposable re-hash philosophy of... so on and so forth.The character continues from the primary installation in the triad ('Suburban Gargoyle' Dogma circa. 1991) searching capricious streets on a naive journey through this Oz blandscape. Connecting only for an intentional diversion from Melville city's vexing threats and existential lack of definition. So forwarding on, he pursues many aspects of loss and waning sanity between the soul crushing worker day humanity. The only reprieve appears in a few differing characters gliding through his existence, as pharmaceutical definition becomes a blurry addition to the loathing and pining life long wish for apt self-disposability. Eventually contradictions build on the personally devised reasoning to evoke damage on what drunken stupidity is left. The asphyxiation within demise merely a flirtation with chemical paradigms and stifling culture of faux free and original thought ... 'be it real or not.'...This complication the manages to dip between the profane, mundane and quasi-porno-tragic reactions of trauma. Taking on another level of experience to the suburban constitutions of regretful flight. But this story hopes against the antithesis of what life appears.So my only advice.. "Don't read this book..." It's just another, badly written melancholy tenant not specific enough to even warrant a glancing sniff. ('I' is for internal monologue.)The un-shocking episodic self-hate, drunk perversion, pious commentary, (loss of plot) becomes tawdry in its attempt to bridge defeatist with denial, while dressing life cheaply as nonsensical cynicism. "In closing." The characters mental societal alienation is quite contrary to what is written. "So get over it"... It's just another work I never really wanted to write.
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