Famous Potatoes
Joe Cottonwood
Read by Joe Cottonwood
"An engaging picaresque novel of a young man on the run. A warm, well-told story of a likable character with a knack for being in the wrong place at the wrong time." —Publisher's Weekly
Willy Middlebrook is a nice boy from the suburbs, a Vietnam vet, a college drop-out majoring in Human Kindness. Framed for the murder of a cop, Willy goes on the lam from the law. With hopeful heart and broken balls he lives among the people of the humble cafes and dusty bars, underground: "They have rough brown skin and wrinkled eyes. They are round and they are usually dirty. They are hard because they have to be, but if you warm them they get soft and you can make them sweet." Famous Potatoes is a road novel with a touch of noir, a tall tale that has been called "exuberant, funny, and humane."
"Like the smudged chrome of a truck-stop diner, Famous Potatoes is an element of a new American realism, and Cottonwood has made it an engaging trip." —Chicago Tribune
The year is 1973. Back in those days only bad people got tattoos; long distance calls cost a small fortune; and an IBM 360 computer with a few hundred kilobytes was enough to run a bank.
"Cottonwood [has] charm--wry, loping, never cute. And, even more crucial, there is Willy's (and Cottonwood's) genuine people-liking, which makes Willy's complications seem less dire; the troubled travels become a nice excuse to meet more interesting folks. Laid-back--but not too much--and attractive." —Kirkus
As a young man, Joe Cottonwood used to hitchhike everywhere. Many of the encounters in Famous Potatoes are based on actual events from those times.
"Blessed with that wonderfully extravagant and original talent for telling tall tales, Joe Cottonwood weaves a whopper that catches you up and rockets you overland as Willy hitches himself on to one crazy adventure after another. . . Willy 'Crusoe' Middlebrook, anonymous fugitive, naive suburbanite, sexual suicide, husband on the run from Philadelphia and St. Louis to the sky-high Rockies of Idaho . . . " —Black Swan
"Philadelphia may never be the same again." —Cleveland Plain Dealer
This podcast is rated deep R for bad language and occasional scenes of funky sex. And a lot of joy.
Author's note: I wrote this novel forty years ago as a cockeyed love letter to the USA. I was a young man without children. Now I am a grandfather. A few of the passages, as I review them now, could make a grandfather blush. Nevertheless I have resisted the impulse to censor any youthful excess. I've also let stand the passages that would now be deemed Politically Incorrect. They are an accurate rendition of the times (1973).
This book comes from Scribl.com. Visit Scribl to support the author or learn how to self-publish your own audiobook.
Chapters
FamousPotatoes-01 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-02 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-03 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-04 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-05 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-06 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-07 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-08 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-09 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-10 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-11 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-12 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-13 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-14 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-15 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-16 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-17 | Read by Joe Cottonwood | |
FamousPotatoes-18 | Read by Joe Cottonwood |
Reviews
A LibriVox Listener
Enjoyable, fanciful and heartwarming. Reminds me of the days when I used to say "Grandma, tell me a story." Those came without the adult content, of course. :-) (As it should be, since I'm an adult.) This was a nice jaunt to the good old days. Did I just say that? It didn't hurt that I'm from St. Louis. And Mr. Cottonwood is right. Most of us landlocked in the Midwest don't care much about the lifestyles on the coasts.We prefer to read about it.:-D
By: Isis62
Joe, this story is so different from all your others. Sex, drugs and blue grass. I think I like your kids books better but this was a good story too. Just a different side of Joe Cottonwood. Love the music as usual. So many times I kept waiting and waiting ...
By: Michael Clare
Joe, I was introduced to this book way back in the late 70's and I have kept it close to my heart ever since. It is a vastly underrated book. This may sound blasphemous to those literary highbrow types, but I place it up there with "On The Road." It ...
Peter Pan life
Cindy Barnett
Lighthearted narration didn't assuage sadness of main characters Peter Pan life (never grow up, not him)! No mystery how he ends up (settling mostly). Interesting but wouldn't want my children using it as a moral tale. Nicely narrated by author.
By: robin sullivan
I listened to the first episode of this on a whim - it was one of the top rated books - I greatly enjoyed it - I especially liked the analyzing of the suicide note - very funny. Nicely done.
By: Dariclone
Hi, Joe! It's so great that you came back with a new book. I found it very different from your others, but I came to love it, just like all your books!
By: Maureen
I've searched high and low for the song about Leonard and Clyde but I cannot find it! Who wrote it, lyrics and music, ect???? Great story by the way!
Native Kiowa
I don’t know what everyone sees in this mess but songs don’t belong in a book. I’m sorry I just can’t find anything good to say about this.