Oreo
Written by Fran Ross
Narrated by Robin Miles
4/5
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About this audiobook
Fran Ross
Fran Ross was born in 1935 and grew up in Philadelphia. She graduated from high school when she was fifteen-years-old and went onto study Communications, Journalism, and Theatre at Temple University. She moved to New York in 1960 where she worked as a proofreader and journalist. Her book Oreo was originally published in 1974 during the height of the Black Power Movement. She then moved to Los Angeles to write comedy for Richard Pryor. She died in 1985 in New York.
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Reviews for Oreo
82 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This story was a hilarious linguistic romp within a quest. Most of the social commentary and satire were beyond me as an old white Californian, but it was a fun quick read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book is like a 1970s American version of Ulysses with just as much vulgarity and just as many clever puns. This book is like Ulysses if Leopold Bloom had been a half-black, half-Jewish, wise-cracking, underaged girl nicknamed "Oreo" as a misunderstanding for "Oriole." This book is like a shorter version of Ulysses with a slightly more coherent plot that lasts longer than one day. Like Ulysses, this book is really unlike anything else.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Six-word review: Broad humor, cunning wit, multicolored language.More: This is definitely one that you have to be in the right frame of mind for. It took me a month to read 230 pages. And I have no idea why it was yes on one day and no on another. But in the end it drew a strong rating from me and ranked as one of my top selections of 2017.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This novel, from the 1970's, by an author who died before she wrote another novel, never deserved to be lost. It's a startling version of Candide, from the PoV of a half black, half Jewish barely adolescent girl, whose custodial mother nicknames her "Oriole", which turns into the name in the title. The creation of new words by Oreo's brother and the Yiddish slang make for a hilarious mixtape/mixture of stunning verbal swordplay, including a quiz for his peers on the woodworking skills of Jesus. There's also the fictional Whitehall, an upper middle class African American town that was recently sent up by Key and Peele in their "Negrotown" sketch - for real, they have to have read this book. Oreo's journey from Philadelphia to Harlem to find her runaway Jewish father turns into a re-telling of the life of the Greek hero Theseus. So brilliant, hilarious, and memorable that it's all quotes from here on:"Look at that moron grin, " a wagonload of Jukes once said as they went creaking and kallikaking past the village green.""Oreo saw Mrs. Scott drop the same teaspoon seven times. Then the woman pulled herself together and dropped a cup for a change. It was what General Mills must go through when Betty Crocker was in middleschmertz.""As the train filled, the hardened travelers settled down into the business of Hoping My Seatmate Will Keep His/Her Trap Shut And Let Me Read The Paper to the even more fervent Hoping No Mewling Brats Are Aboard.""He patted her hand and gave her an actor's look of fake sincerity or sincere fakery - she did not know which."
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I adored Fran Ross's word trickery in this one. Wow, she was a smart cookie! I can't even imagine writing this book before being able to access the internet... it certainly helped to have the internet next to me while reading it! Ross throws so many different cultures into her writing, which is probably one of the reasons it was so overlooked in 1974. I am glad it was republished. On one page, I went back to read it to see how many times I laughed and it was at least eight times. Eight laughs on one page! That deserves some credit right there. Ross rewrites the myth of Theseus and his quest to find his father to write the story of Oreo, a teen in Pittsburgh, born with an African American mother and a Jewish father. This girl is a superhero, staying tough through all the wacky situations she gets into. As the writer herself must have been a superhero. The book loses a bit of steam towards the end, but it's a must-experience book anyway. I really appreciated the "Key For Speed Readers, Non-classicists" at the back of the book which ran down the Theseus myth. I read it before beginning the narrative and it really helped connect everything to the myth. Otherwise I would have been lost. I can see this book influencing so many other books.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5What a challenging book! I have lots of thoughts and will post a fuller review soon, but in short, I have to say this manages to combine lowbrow slapstick with erudite linguistic humor in a way I've never seen before.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is totally one of those hidden-from-history books. Fran Ross was an experimental fiction writer who also wrote material for Richard Pryor. This book hangs its narrative on the Theseus story, and is a satire maybe? definitely uses pastiche. Oreo, the kid of a Jewish father and an African American mother, is raised by her grandparents and then goes to find her father, which is the quest. The copy I have has an introduction by Harryette Mullen, which totally worth reading.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This one is satirical, something I'd compare most closely to John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces. Young Christine (Oreo) is born to an African American woman and a Jewish American man (whose coupling caused quite a bit of conflict within their families), raised by her maternal grandmother until the day she comes of age and ventures off on a parody of the Greek-mythical Hero's Quest. It's goofy, deliberately odd, and was a lot of fun to read. I'm not sure I'd recommend it - for this genre, Toole's work is better, but if you enjoyed A Confederacy of Dunces and are after more in that vein, give this a look.