The Scheme for Full Employment

A Novel

Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book The Scheme for Full Employment by Magnus Mills, Picador
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Magnus Mills ISBN: 9781429978057
Publisher: Picador Publication: April 1, 2010
Imprint: Picador Language: English
Author: Magnus Mills
ISBN: 9781429978057
Publisher: Picador
Publication: April 1, 2010
Imprint: Picador
Language: English

From Magnus Mills, the acknowledged master of the working-class dystopic parable—a genre he practically invented—a new work of comic genius

The whole idea is simple yet so perfect: men drive to and from strategically placed warehouses in Univans—identical and serviceable vehicles—transporting replacement parts for...Univans. Gloriously self-perpetuating, the Scheme was designed to give an honest day's wage for an honest day's labor. That it produces nothing does not obtain. Our hero in Magnus Mills' mesmerizing new work is a five-year veteran of the Scheme: he knows the best routes, the easiest managers, the quickest ways in and out. Inevitably, trouble begins to brew. A woman arrives on the scene. Some workers develop delivery sidelines. And most disturbing of all, not all participants are in agreement. There are "Flat-Dayers," who believe the Scheme's eight-hour day is sacrosanct and inviolable, and there are "Swervers," who fancy being let off a little early now and again. Disagreement turns to argument, argument to debate, debate to outright schism. Soon the Flat-Dayers and Swervers have pushed the Scheme to the very brink of disaster...and readers to the edge of their chairs in delight.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

From Magnus Mills, the acknowledged master of the working-class dystopic parable—a genre he practically invented—a new work of comic genius

The whole idea is simple yet so perfect: men drive to and from strategically placed warehouses in Univans—identical and serviceable vehicles—transporting replacement parts for...Univans. Gloriously self-perpetuating, the Scheme was designed to give an honest day's wage for an honest day's labor. That it produces nothing does not obtain. Our hero in Magnus Mills' mesmerizing new work is a five-year veteran of the Scheme: he knows the best routes, the easiest managers, the quickest ways in and out. Inevitably, trouble begins to brew. A woman arrives on the scene. Some workers develop delivery sidelines. And most disturbing of all, not all participants are in agreement. There are "Flat-Dayers," who believe the Scheme's eight-hour day is sacrosanct and inviolable, and there are "Swervers," who fancy being let off a little early now and again. Disagreement turns to argument, argument to debate, debate to outright schism. Soon the Flat-Dayers and Swervers have pushed the Scheme to the very brink of disaster...and readers to the edge of their chairs in delight.

More books from Picador

Cover of the book Venus Drive by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book Treeborne by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book The Country Life by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book When Hitler Took Cocaine and Lenin Lost His Brain by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book The Memory Painter by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book No Logo by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book Galatea 2.2 by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book People in Glass Houses by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book First Cut by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book The Inner Life of Martin Frost by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book Letters to a Young Muslim by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book Caring Economics by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book The Lady in the Van by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book The Coast of Chicago by Magnus Mills
Cover of the book Trials of the Monkey by Magnus Mills
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy