Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Delightful novel unfolds through corporate memos

- By John Domini Star Tribune

Please be advised: The “Workflow Specialist,” here at Quest Industries, has concerns. “Outdated paper files,” he warns us, have left most cubicles “filled with highly flammable corporate twaddle … certifiabl­e fire hazards.”

It’s high time employees got rid of their “paper flotsam,” but a reader knows better. Without that flotsam, we wouldn’t have this delightful grab bag of a fiction, American business at its most bonkers, told entirely through interoffic­e memoranda.

“Please Be Advised: A Novel in Memos” is Christine Sneed’s third novel, and she’s published award-winning short fiction, but she’s never taken such a freewheeli­ng approach. Speaking through the communique­s that plague office life, she develops a choral plague story; it’s a very bad year for Quest, based somewhere in Chicago and, till now, “the world’s leading purveyor of collapsibl­e … office supplies.” As the company’s troubles mount, too, we learn to recognize its most distinctiv­e voices.

The CEO has a lot to say, naturally. He’s a British expat, the kind of snoot who signs his name “Esquire,” but his pretension­s can’t hide what a bad job he’s doing, between his fondness for the bottle and his belief in things like forest nymphs. Then there’s new hire Ken Crickshaw, who seems to add a new title with every memo. His swift climb through the ranks, like the CEO’S tumble, has its dotty, disturbing elements. In particular, Crickshaw never clears up the nasty questions about his past.

That’s the plot, a classic switcheroo, but gone crazy. Sneed has seized on the way personal quirks sneak into our profession­al lives and blown it sky-high, giving us memos rife with sex, slapstick and magic. One sequence of correspond­ence, intended to raise company morale, gets into grotesque details of “personal triumph.” Another tracks an attempt at “office matchmakin­g,” in which the woman of the couple plainly doesn’t believe there’s such a thing as oversharin­g, or for that matter fidelity.

The effects aren’t solely comic either. Sneed also works in eerie moments, with ghost sightings and ghastly odors, and poignant touches. A good man’s humiliatio­n becomes a public spectacle, and a “personal triumph” reveals a pathetic life.

Overall, however, reading “Please Be Advised” feels like a riding a skipping stone. Each splashdown is followed by another liftoff, further wackiness.

Even the grim attentions of the IRS, the inevitable company audit, see those bean counters stuffed into the clown car with everyone else. The Revenuers get the final word, and it plainly implies that, while this “collapsibl­e office” may have collapsed, its human carnival will gambol on. Now that deserves a memo.

 ?? ?? “Please Be Advised” by Christine Sneed (7.13 Books, $20)
“Please Be Advised” by Christine Sneed (7.13 Books, $20)

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