The Pleasure of My Company

The Pleasure of My Company
by Steve Martin

The Pleasure of My Company
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Book Summary Information

Author: Steve Martin
Edition: Paperback
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2004-10-06
ISBN: 0786888016
Number of pages: 176
Publisher: Hyperion

Book Reviews of The Pleasure of My Company

Book Review: Mature and Perceptive
Summary: 4 Stars

This is the story of Daniel Pecan Cambridge, his withdrawal from humanity and his return to the great masses. The book is not long, only 163 pages, but I found it both amusing and insightful.

Daniel has some psychological problems (pecan...nut....get it?) He can no longer hold down a job or communicate easily with others. He lives an isolated life in Santa Monica, filling his days with obsessive-compulsive rituals. Likeable, gentle, with moments of great insight and others of total cluelessness, he has the fashion sense of Rain Man and the mathematical ability of John Nash. Daniel still finds other people interesting, and his desire to have a relationship with a woman leads him along a path that eventually helps him return to a richer life.

This isn't an academically rigorous portrayal of specific mental health issues, but the character of Daniel works very well as a kind of neurotic Everyman. He is close enough that we can understand his world. He's interesting. We like him and cheer him on, for he is not tormented to the extent that we are alienated or repelled. The mathematical patterns and seemingly random rules that he uses to make his life bearable might be superficially amusing, but they serve much the same purpose as conventional social patterns. There is plenty of entertaining social commentary in this story, and more than a token jab at the egocentric who takes too much delight in his or her own company.

Things occasionally seem a little glib and there are a few heavy handed moments. The ending, in particular, is glossed over. On the redeeming side, the story is imaginative and quirky, and it sustains enough pace to keep you interested. I also admired the author's skill in gradually moving Daniel into a more functional state as the book progresses. There are one or two moments of striking visual imagery, notably where the child Daniel imagines his father to be mathematically fractured.

This writer is a keen observer of human behavior and has a finely developed sense of the absurdities of life. This humour and perceptiveness, combined with a thoughtfulness heavily influenced by undergraduate philosophy, makes for an interesting and unpretentious read that should have a broad appeal. Not as poignant as "Shopgirl", nor as sharply witty as the short stories written for the New Yorker, this quiet novella shows more technical maturity and consistency of style. As a writer of books, Steve Martin has a legitimate voice that is worth listening to.

Summary of The Pleasure of My Company

Steve Martin's "gifts for subtlety and slyness compare to those of the finest comic novelists" (People) and his latest New York Times bestseller -- a witty and tender tour de force -- is now in paperback!

Shopgirl revealed the novelist in Steve Martin -- witty, tender, intelligent, and passionate about his craft. And with the successful publication of The Pleasure of My Company, his reputation as one of our most gifted writers has been confirmed. Here, the reader is introduced to Daniel Pecan Cambridge, whose life is full and rich -- but only within the confines of his Santa Monica apartment. Daniel's pathological obsession with street curbs and gas station attendants wearing blue hats may prevent him from venturing into the world outside of his window, but not from pursuing romance in his own peculiar way.

Meticulously constructed, laugh-out-loud funny, and brilliantly inventive, Steve Martin's chronicle of a modern-day neurotic yearning to break free has touched more than 200,000 readers. Now in paperback, thousands more can have the pleasure of discovering his most delightful novel to date.


Readers expecting something zany, something crudely humorous from Steve Martin's second novel, The Pleasure of My Company, will discover much greater riches. While the book has a sense of humor, Martin moves everywhere with a gentler, lighter touch in this elegant little fiction that verges on the profound and poetic.

Daniel Pecan Cambridge is the narrator and central consciousness of the novel (actually a novella). Daniel, an ex-Hewlett-Packard communiqué encoder, is a savant whose closely proscribed world is bounded on every side by neuroses and obsessions. He cannot cross the street except at driveways symmetrically opposed to each, and he cannot sleep unless the wattage of the active light bulbs in his apartment sums to 1,125. Daniel's starved social life is punctuated by twice-weekly visits from a young therapist in training, Clarissa; by his prescription pick-ups from a Rite Aid pharmacist, Zandy; and by his "casual" meetings with the bleach-blond real estate agent, Elizabeth, who is struggling to sell apartments across the street. But Daniel's dysfunctional routines are shattered one day when he becomes entangled in the chaos of Clarissa's life as a single mother. Taking care of Clarissa's tiny son, Teddy, Daniel begins to emerge from the safety of logic, magic squares, and obsessive counting.

Martin's craftsmanship is remarkable. The tightly packed novella paints rich portraits with restraint and balance, including nothing extraneous to Daniel's world. The book does not try for pyrotechnics but is contented with a Zen-like simplicity in both prose and plot. Avoiding the crushing bleakness of much contemporary fiction, Martin insists through Daniel--a man haunted by horrors of his own making--that there is possibility for compassion, that broken lives can actually be healed. --Patrick O'Kelley

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