Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback Unlubricated Book

ISBN: B000CEXTOI

ISBN13: 9780060734114

Unlubricated

A Fierce and Hysterical Tale
Of Self-Destruction On
The Road to Being Discovered

Hannah is a struggling actress living in New York's Tribeca, and like any young thesp she is bent on success: finding paying jobs that offer good material, not just mindless roles for eager and nubile bodies. When she comes across a lost play by a dead 1980s icon -- brilliantly written, with the perfect role that will display her acting chops...

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

$16.01
50 Available
Ships within 2-3 days

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A good novel

I just read this New York novel over about a week's time, and found the story compelling me more and more to invest myself in it. It's a good story, filled with lots of realistically selfish and jerk-like characters all bunched together into situations that require alcohol to tolerate the time, or some other carrot like sex, money or fame. The author chose to put his story up against a difficult backdrop of history, which I found inconveniently and unexpectedly awkward and tragic - just like the real thing. With lots of details to the ins & outs of producing a theatrical play and narrated by a robustly focused female protagonist voice, "Unlubricated" starts off with a stiff pain that grows a bit soar, eventually coming to an intense, slippery and messy end.

A fast paced look at downtown NYC post 9-11

I enjoyed this book. A portrait of an actress trying to search for her place in the world after witnessing the fall of the twin towers. Great details for those familiar with the locations and people that make downtown New York its own universe. Some names are changed to protect the innocent, but even if you have never ventured south of Times Square, I believe you will be able to enjoy these characters and their attempts to "make it". A quick read (I finished this in one sitting and I am not a fast reader), fast paced, smart and funny. I am looking forward to reading other books by this author.

How Not To Launch Your Career

Arthur Nersesian has written another funny street-smart novel about trying to make it as a young artist in New York. Unlubricated tells the tale of Hannah Cohn, a young actress trying to get cast in a serious role. Everybody knows how hard it is to launch an acting career, and how crazy young actors can be. So when Hannah gets control of a previously unknown great play by a well-known but now deceased author, she thinks she has found the path to jump start her career by taking one of the leading roles. Moreover, given that she and everybody she knows is stone broke, the trick is to mount a credible production on a shoestring. The great thing about Arthur Nersesian's work is that he knows the downtown New York scene and he's able to portray it in every detail: the chic shops and restaurants, the little corner delis, the cobblestoned streets, the drunks spilling out on the streets late at night: it's all there. And he conjures up believable characters, messy mixes of ambition, talent, vanity and odd personal weaknesses. From this hothouse world of conflicting desires and personalities, Nersesian has a gift for telling his story in an hilarious but dead-on way. There were many scenes that were just laugh-out loud funny, but wholly credible. There were some things I didn't love about this novel: the ending seemed a little tacked on, and although the events of 9/11 play a role in the story, I found some of the description of the events of the day extraneous. I don't doubt that 9/11 moved Nersesian, as it did anybody who was there that day, but it felt like an unnecessary back-story. But overall it was a fast-paced and very enjoyable novel.

another great one

First and foremost: thank you Arthur Nersesian. This novel was like his others in that it was a fantastic read, had well developed characters, dynamic in that Nersesian has given them an original personality with their own original drives and personalties; and yet they are people we identify with because we know or have known them in life. Nersesian has once again put us in the life of a starving artist in New York. Instead of the art world of New York coupled with the life of living out of a van in Chinese Take Out, we follow an actress/producer through the world of just what actresses will do to be casted and also what writers are sometimes forced to do just to be published coupled with eviction court and just how hard it is to find a reasonable living arrangement. The naivety of the publisher and also the writer coupled with their strong New York street smarts creates a powerful dichotomy that seems to mirror the confusion and horror of the backdrop of this novel: New York city late 2001. Arthur Nersesian shines here as well as he deals this dark hour in our American history and of course in the history of New York City. As I saw the unbelieveably surreal horror that was September eleventh unfold again before me through the eyes of a New Yorker I began to empathize with the people that have had their lives and their homes changed forever. I also sweel with pride now when I put on my I "heart" New York shirt...through Nersesians writings I have truly developed a love for the city and also understand what makes the citizens so strong and special.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured