Reviewed by Andrew Holgate
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Considering how central it is to American life, work has played a surprisingly
marginal role in the country’s fiction. Though the subject is often touched
on, few novels have ever focused on it with the sort of all-consuming
intensity that such an all-consuming subject seems to merit.
In his outstanding debut, Joshua Ferris concentrates on almost nothing else.
Set in a failing Chicago advertising agency during the late 1990s downturn,
Then We Came to the End dissects with precision, a fine ironic detachment
and the deftest of comic touches, both the unholy terror and the mean,
stifling pettiness of life on the white-collar treadmill. In the
claustrophobic world of Ferris’s agency, weekends are rarely mentioned, life
outside the office barely acknowledged. Instead, the novel’s cynical crew of
art directors and down-at-heel copywriters bitch, backbite, carp and
complain their way through the day, all the while indulging in “cheap talk
to better dramatise our lives”. Occasionally people do some work; mostly,
though, as they manoeuvre their way through the minefield of provisional
office relationships, they mark time and gossip.
The facelessness of the surroundings — the office is located some 60 floors up
a giant skyscraper — is mirrored by the facelessness of the workers, who, in
a deliberate ploy by Ferris, seem at first to be almost indistinguishable
from each other (the narrator identifies him or herself merely by the word
“we”). Gradually, however, without ever being picked out in detail, an array
of dysfunctional figures emerge from the corporate fug. There is Jim
Jackers, the office nerd and last person to cotton on to anything; Marcia
Dwyer, the grungy art director, who never has a kind word for anyone; Tom
Mota, bull-necked, edgy and disturbingly prone to cruel acts of office
rebellion; Joe Pope, the office senior to whom nobody talks; Carl Garbedian,
in the throws of a breakdown and stealing pills from other people to help
him cope; Benny Shassburger, everyone’s favourite office friend; and Lynn
Mason, the diminutive boss whom everyone fears and everyone knows has
cancer. By the end of this hugely satisfying and intelligent novel, each one
of these characters, and several more besides, has been winningly fleshed
out.
Although Ferris fills his book with a series of elaborate, exceptionally
well-executed set pieces, often both funny and starkly cruel, one central
question dominates the narrative — the endless, unnerving one of who is next
in line for the chop. As the novel progresses, a procession of people to
whom the reader has been only half introduced heads down the hall for the
exit door (“walking Spanish”, the office workers call it). Sometimes people
take their termination well; sometimes (in the case of the unstable Mota)
they try throwing their computer out the window. Inevitably, though, the
sour smell of their departure wafts back down the hall, infecting those left
behind and making them even more callous and nihilistic than they were
before.
Despite the humour in which the book is bathed, Then We Came to the End is an
angry novel, but it’s not angry in the way one might expect. In choosing
corporate culture as his subject, Ferris has given himself an easy target at
which to aim, but instead of taking pot shots at the obvious people (he
deals with both Pope and the dying Mason, for instance, with particular
tenderness), he focuses much of his venom on the pack mentality of those in
lesser positions. The implied criticism of how work warps our entire way of
living is all the more powerful for it.
If the book has one failing, it is in its occasional (and it is only
occasional) flirting with sentimentality. But this is a small price to pay
for an incisive, urgent, funny and snappily written novel (the dialogue is
especially taut). How such a debut failed to propel Ferris onto the upcoming
list of the Granta Best of Young American writers is, frankly, baffling.
THEN WE CAME TO THE END by Joshua Ferris
Viking £14.99 pp312
Available at the Sunday Times Books First price of £13.49 (inc p&p)
on 0870 165 8585 and timesonline.co.uk/booksfirst
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