Bug Jack Barron: Difference between revisions

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{{quote| ''"The saddest day of your life isn't when you decide to sell out. The saddest day of your life is when you decide to sell out and ''nobody wants to buy''."''}}
{{quote|''"The saddest day of your life isn't when you decide to sell out. The saddest day of your life is when you decide to sell out and ''nobody wants to buy''."''}}


''Bug Jack Barron'' is a 1969 novel by [[Norman Spinrad]]--more famous for ''[[The Iron Dream (Literature)|The Iron Dream]]''--(previously serialized in ''[[New World]]'' under [[Michael Moorcock]]'s editorship) centering around a cynical talk show host named Jack Barron, who uncovers a conspiracy surrounding an immortality treatment and the methods used to produce it.
''Bug Jack Barron'' is a 1969 novel by [[Norman Spinrad]]--more famous for ''[[The Iron Dream]]''--(previously serialized in ''[[New World]]'' under [[Michael Moorcock]]'s editorship) centering around a cynical talk show host named Jack Barron, who uncovers a conspiracy surrounding an immortality treatment and the methods used to produce it.
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{{tropelist}}
=== Tropes: ===
* [[Aesoptinium]]: The treatment is produced by {{spoiler|irradiating children to death. The one that we hear about specifically is [[Unfortunate Implications|African American]].}}
* [[Aesoptinium]]: The treatment is produced by {{spoiler|irradiating children to death. The one that we hear about specifically is [[Unfortunate Implications|African American]].}}
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]
* [[Catch Phrase]]: "Bugged? Then Bug Jack Barron!"
* [[Catch Phrase]]: "Bugged? Then Bug Jack Barron!"
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: Sara Westerfield (Jack's ex-wife whom he starts to reconcile with), when she finds out what the treatment entails.
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: Sara Westerfield (Jack's ex-wife whom he starts to reconcile with), when she finds out what the treatment entails.
* [[High Times Future]]: Jack's talk show is sponsored primarily by Acapulco Golds, "America's Premium Marijuana Cigarettes" ([[Society Marches On|the book was written when cigarette ads were still legal on U.S. television]]). Tobacco is illegal.
* [[High Times Future]]: Jack's talk show is sponsored primarily by Acapulco Golds, "America's Premium Marijuana Cigarettes" ([[Society Marches On|the book was written when cigarette ads were still legal on U.S. television]]). Tobacco is illegal.
* [[Hipgnosis]]: Designed [http://hipgnosiscovers.com/normanspinrad.html the dust jacket] for the original British hardback edition.
* [[Human Resources]]: see Aesoptinium entry.
* [[Human Resources]]: See Aesoptinium entry.
* {{spoiler|[[Powered by a Forsaken Child]]: In case you haven't figured it out yet.}}
* [[Who Wants to Live Forever?]]
* [[Who Wants to Live Forever?]]



Latest revision as of 16:19, 18 February 2015

"The saddest day of your life isn't when you decide to sell out. The saddest day of your life is when you decide to sell out and nobody wants to buy."

Bug Jack Barron is a 1969 novel by Norman Spinrad--more famous for The Iron Dream--(previously serialized in New World under Michael Moorcock's editorship) centering around a cynical talk show host named Jack Barron, who uncovers a conspiracy surrounding an immortality treatment and the methods used to produce it.


Tropes used in Bug Jack Barron include: