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Random

By: Penn Jillette
Narrated by: Penn Jillette
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Summary

Two weeks before his twenty-first birthday, Las Vegas native Bobby Ingersoll finds out he’s inherited a crushing gambling debt from his scumbag father. The debt is owed to an even scummier bag named Fraser Ruphart who oversees his bottom-rung criminal empire from the classy-adjacent Trump International Hotel. Bobby’s prospects of paying off the note, which comes due the day he turns twenty-one, are about as dim as the sign on the tower’s façade.

The two weeks pass in the blink of a (snake) eye, but before Bobby’s luck runs out, he stumbles upon enough cash to pay Ruphart off and change his family’s fortune. More importantly, he finds himself with a new, for lack of a better word, faith.

Bobby does not consign his big break to a “higher power"—what Penn Jillette hero ever could? Instead, he devises and devotes himself to Random, a philosophy where his life choices are based entirely on the roll of his “lucky” dice. What follows is a hilarious exploration into not so much what defines us as what divines us when we give over every decision—from what to eat to whom to marry to how or when to die—to the random fall of two numbered cubes.

Combining the intellectual curiosity of Richard Dawkins with the humor and grit of an Elmore Leonard antihero, Jillette’s up-on-his-luck Ingersoll is the character we need to help us navigate the chaos of the post-truth era.

Well, unless his roll runs cold.

©2022 Penn Jillette (P)2022 Blackstone Publishing
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Random

random is defo the word loved every moment need some more fiction out of you mr jillette

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Title Says It All

If you were expecting “Zen & The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance” … well it ain’t that. In fact, it’s just about the polar opposite. You’re taken through a strange journey in Penn Jillette’s head.

I’ve only been to LV twice in my life, yet this had some familiarities to it. The humour is black, the allusions and illusions crude and funny.

You probably won’t be reading it out loud to your granny. But the reading is strong throughout and while it may not be the “best” book ever written it doesn’t need a throw of the dice to want to know what’s in the next chapter.

Weird, base, yet strangely entertaining!

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