
"Part Philip Dick, part Kurt Vonnegut part Fyodor Dostoevsky; I loved it!"
(Andy Nasatir,
El Camino College Bookstore)
"I rarely read books during the academic
year anymore--just in the summer--always sooooo busy. You sparked my
curiosity, and I found reading a bit of your book in the evenings a nice
escape from the computer. It was a refreshing, much needed change in my
hectic schedule. Of course, it helped that the book kept me engaged....
It's so preposterous and believable at the same time.... I love how you
portray the masses.... sheep! The whole hotel section--25 pages or so--were
my favorite. Your sex with the prostitute didn't do much for me.... I
enjoyed the lesbians."
;-)
(Vivian Sinou,
Dean, Distance & Mediated Learning
Foothill College
12345 El Monte Road
Los Altos Hills, CA 94022)
"I am finally done... And yes I am still speaking with you...
I think I actually got to like it somewhat.
HTCGW made me think, laugh, shudder, and kept me entertained.
I was unable to put the book down. I had to finish it.
Awaiting the book-on-tape version."
(Gabi S.,
former student)
"[HTCGW} was pretty good, although at the
beginning was kind of hard to follow,
but at the end I couldn't stop reading it until I finished it!
Boy! It cost me a whole weekend of not studying!"
(Rosa S.,
another former student)
"If you want to get an idea of what the next cult novel is likely to be,
pick up a copy of
HITLER THE CAT GOES WEST. . . "
(Gale Windom, New Haven Gazette)
"Why can't the really provocative books be more accessible?"
(Laurence de Groot, The New Caledonian)
"Frankly, I hated [it]. . .but I simply could not put it down.
It scared me to think that this is where America might be headed."
(Elizabeth Ann Mauler, UnderWraps Monthly)
"Words fail me.
Fortunately, they did not fail this unknown, and as yet
undiscovered talent."
(Henry Merchant, The Merchant of Venice, California)
"I read it in one sitting, and then bathed thoroughly."
(Maury L. Davies, The Dorchester Sunday Times)
"HITLER THE CAT shares certain structural and post structural similarities
with the early Voltaire, yet the author's constant references,
albeit unsaid and unwritten, to the putative `worst of all possible worlds,'
makes reading this short pastiche an altogether far more delightful experience."
(Dr. Henrich L. D. Dromaucher, The Journal of Philology, Semeiotics and Patristics)
"Zowee!"
(Clyde Scruggs, jazz musician)
"It's really dope!"
(Clarissa Canadar, high school dropout)
"Yeah!!"
(Thurston Davis, Clarissa's boyfriend)

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