Salmonella Men on Planet Porno: Stories

Salmonella Men on Planet Porno: Stories

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Editorial Reviews

This collection of marvelously off-kilter short stories – the American debut of acclaimed Japanese writer Yasutaka Tsutsui – portrays the consequences of a world where the fantastic and the mundane collide and throw the lives of ordinary men and women into disarray.

In “The Dabba Dabba Tree” Tsutsui describes the hilarious side effects of a small conical tree that, when placed at the foot of one’s bed, creates erotic dreams that metamorphose into communal farce. In “Commuter Army”–a sly commentary on the ludicrousness of war–a weapons supplier whose rifles cease functioning after just one shot becomes an unwilling conscript in a war zone. “The World is Tilting” imagines a floating city that slowly begins to sink on one side, causing its citizens to reorient their daily lives to preserve a semblance of normality. In “Rumors About Me”, an ordinary office worker finds himself the subject of intense media scrutiny, his every action documented in the tabloids. And in the title story, we learn just how obscenely absurd the environment on Planet Porno can seem to a group of hapless research scientists.

With a sharp eye towards the insanities of contemporary life, Yasutaka Tsutsui crafts in Salmonella Men on Planet Porno an irresistible mix of imagination, satiric fantasy, and truly madcap hilarity.

Customer Reviews

Dazzling Unreality

Reviewed by Louis N. Gruber, 2009-05-26

In this dazzling collection of thirteen short stories, ordinary reality quickly changes into something very different. A little bonsai tree at the foot of a couples's bed gives them erotic dreams--in which their neighbors become involved (really). A corporate drone finds his smallest actions reported in the newspaper. The last smoker finds himself an endangered species, as society turns against tobacco. Each story begins with a somewhat believable premise and quickly descends to absurdity and way, way beyond.

The stories are amazing, amusing, shocking, and erotic. Author Tsutsui writes brilliantly in crisp, lucid prose. I enjoyed the collection thoroughly. There is some unevenness among the stories--the title story being a little less engaging than the others. Still, these are great short stories and I recommend them highly. Reviewed by Louis N. Gruber.

An Intriguing Debut Short Story Collection

Reviewed by Sacramento Book Review, 2009-02-02

A great thing about some of the famous Japanese writers (Haruki Murakami and, now, Yasutaka Tsutsui) is their genre crossing and their willingness to violate certain traditional boundaries in their fiction. To them, such genre-jumping is no big deal, if it's all in the interest of spinning a good yarn; in comparison, American writers can feel overly conservative and restricted. Yasutaka Tsutsui's debut collection of stories,
Salmonella Men on Planet Porno, shows off his wide-ranging talent, moving from straightforward realism to satiric fantasy to science fiction. The three best stories in the collection (The Dabba Dabba Tree, Rumors About Me, and Th e Last Smoker) showcase Tsutsui at his unique best. In Th e Dabba Dabba Tree an estranged couple's small tree, kept at the foot of their bed, inspires the most realistic erotic dreams, while in The Last Smoker smokers actually border on extinction, due primarily to societal persecution. Rumors About Me is the clear stand-out, however. Here, Tsutsui truly hits his stride. It is a brilliant satiric tale, involving an ordinary, quite unremarkable man who mysteriously catches the media's attention and whose every ordinary moment--doing laundry, buying a suit in monthly installments, purchasing socks--is documented in the newspaper, for inexplicable reasons. And, not only is his every moment documented, it is front-page, headline news. The rest of the story concerns his desire to find out why this is happening to him. Other stories in the collection, notably "Don't Laugh," "Bravo Herr Mozart!" and "Hello, Hello, Hello!," are much less successful. Perhaps the only real criticism is that the stories can be uneven in quality, ranging from brilliant to mediocre-at-best. Still, this is an intriguing debut from a writer who, at his best, can match--and occasionally surpass--fellow countryman Haruki Murakami.

Reviewed by Aaron Stypes

Surreal and offbeat

Reviewed by Raven, 2009-01-06

This was my first exposure to Yasutaka Tsutsui, but I'm glad that his work is being translated into English -- it won't be the last! "Salmonella Men" is a collection of shorts that you'd expect if O. Henry were a salaryman, vignettes of the everyday that become profoundly disturbing in short order. There's experimentation with dream worlds and alternate realities, and the character studies are vivid if occasionally baffling. There's an unexpected bawdiness to some of the stories (okay, so you got that from the title, but it can be shocking if you've read more straightlaced Japanese literature), but it's so funny that you really don't stop to think much about it being pornographic. As the "Publisher's Weekly" review suggests, the novelty of his approach rubs off about halfway through the book and it does start to feel a touch self-similar, but there's enough literary merit to carry the rest regardless. Fans of literature of the fantastic and magical realism in particular will be entertained.