Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Random

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From Penn Jillette of the legendary magic duo Penn & Teller: a rollicking crime caper that will bend your mind like a spoon.

"Penn Jillette is an atheist, triple-goddamned lunatic, and his book is a glorious Las Vegas lunatic paean to chance and adventure—a page-turning, scabrous, hilarious ride into randomness." —Neil Gaiman

"Jillette's latest novel, Random, is about a young man who inherits his father's crushing debt to a loan shark and turns to dice—and other dangerous measures—to dig himself out. That the dice bring him luck sends him a new philosophy of leaving decisions both big and small up to chance." —New York Times

Two weeks before his twenty-first birthday, Las Vegas native Bobby Ingersoll finds out he's inherited a crushing gambling debt from his scumbag father. The debt is owed to an even scummier bag named Fraser Ruphart who oversees his bottom-rung criminal empire from the classy-adjacent Trump International Hotel. Bobby's prospects of paying off the note, which comes due the day he turns twenty-one, are about as dim as the sign on the hotel's facade.

The two weeks pass in the blink of a (snake) eye, but before Bobby's luck runs out, he stumbles upon enough cash to pay off Ruphart and change his family's fortune. More importantly, he finds himself with a new, for lack of a better word, faith.

Bobby does not consign his big break to a "higher power"—what Penn Jillette hero ever could? Instead, he devises and devotes himself to Random, a philosophy where his life choices are based entirely on the roll of his "lucky" dice. What follows is a rollicking exploration into not so much what defines us as what divines us when we give over every decision—from what to eat to whom to marry to how or when to die—to the random fall of two numbered cubes.

Random combines the intellectual curiosity of Richard Dawkins with the humor and grit of an Elmore Leonard antihero. Jillette's up-on-his-luck Ingersoll is the character we need to help us navigate the chaos of the post-truth era.

Well, unless his roll runs cold.
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 1, 2022
      Jillette (Presto!), the magician best known as the verbal half of Penn and Teller, unveils an entertaining Las Vegas picaresque. The protagonist, Bobby Ingersoll, is the child of a showgirl and a gambler. His father, Dave, has placed the entire clan in jeopardy by racking up over $2.5 million in debt to the dangerous Fraser Ruphart. With two weeks to go before the debt is due, Bobby happens upon the aftermath of a street fight and finds a bag containing more than $500,000. His good fortune continues when he bets almost that entire windfall at a casino and wins enough to pay off Fraser. Then, Bobby decides that rolling a pair of dice will decide his next choices. A series of entertaining episodes ensue: he tags along with an underwriter of high-stakes promotional betting after meeting the man on a plane, and opens a detective agency for people whose luck has run out. Jillette cleverly addresses the unlikely material, noting how screenwriters often “hang a lamp” on their implausible plot points (he cites Bruce Willis in Die Hard 2: “How can the same thing happen to the same guy again?”). Jillette’s acerbic wit and perfect pacing keep this afloat. Readers will hope Jillette has more fiction up his sleeves. Agent: Steve Fisher, APA Talent and Literary.

    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2022
      After a near miss with a vicious Las Vegas gangster leads to good fortune, a truck driver abandons his fate to chance. Jillette is one of our weirder national treasures, having graduated from MTV-era oddball to perpetual residency in Vegas, but he's also written delightful mongrels like his 2004 comic noir Sock. Here, the writer turns to that which he knows, specifically the bizarro fishbowl that is Sin City, the weird science of percentages, and games of chance. Our unironic hero is Bobby Ingersoll, a nobody who makes his living driving strip club ads up and down the Strip. Bobby might have remained a nobody if his pops hadn't gotten in deep with gangster Fraser Ruphart to the tune of $2.5 million and some change. After accidentally ripping off some gangbangers during a botched robbery, Bobby drops it all on a roll of the dice and suddenly finds himself a multimillionaire with an epiphany: "The Dice now owned Bobby. He owed his life to Chance. He had a superpower under our yellow sun. Bobby knew and accepted that life was Random. Bobby was enlightened. Siddhartha was dead. Bobby was Buddha." Rolling the dice to make all of life's extraneous decisions gives Bobby some much-needed joy but also inevitably gets him into trouble. Not that he doesn't have a lot of fun first, although whether it's to readers' amusement or dismay may depend on their personal appetites for vice and folly. Among other misadventures, all punctuated by Jillette's sardonic cultural asides and math lessons, Bobby gets a full-body tattoo, learns a few lessons in sexual fluidity, romances a gold-digging grifter, and buys a private detective agency so he can become a wealthy crime fighter. You know, like Batman. But even Batman probably didn't count on a client whose case is rattling the cage of a dangerous casino heist crew, the unlikely return of Ruphart, and a showdown at the Trump International Hotel. An average joe's free-spirited, madcap romp through the last days of American empire.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2022
      Penn Jillette is half of Penn & Teller, the longest-running magic show in Las Vegas. This is his crime-fiction debut, and he has put together a wild story set in Sin City that is sinfully diverting. Bobby Ingersoll has inherited his father's multimillion-dollar gambling debt from crime boss Fraser Ruphart. Bobby begs, borrows, and steals all he can, and even ends up with a Gucci bag full of cash when he happens upon a drug deal gone bad. Then he hits it big--really big--at the craps table and finds he has more money than he knows what to do with. He settles up with Ruphart, who now wants him dead because Bobby dissed him--something to do with a Hawaiian pizza. Setting himself up in a PI business so he can help other, seemingly hopeless, cases results in additional mortal peril. Bobby is as louche as any character created by Elmore Leonard, but some readers may find that an overabundance of raunchy sex sometimes detracts from an otherwise crackerjack caper.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading