This novel is a delicious mixture of fantasy, fiction, and humour. The hero has got a hundred names. “Jestus, for to-day. It could be anything to-morrow.” (Yeah, you read it correctly.) He appears to be insane, but he drives you crazy by his words – fuzzy logic. But then, his concomitant actions make you dizzy. The combination is called “fuzzy-dizzy logic”, which can make the impossible possible, and the possible impossible. How do you make a billion in five weeks straight? No sweat; read the very first chapter. How do you deal with robber-cum-rapists? Watch him in action. And gain an extra day in a week, in the process. How to deal with noisy neighbours? Take a gift of four plastic swastikas from him; the problem auto-solves. Ever seen a psychiatrist being treated by his patient?! It is fun, it is thrilling. It is poignant too. (Only, if Jestus is the patient, of course.) How can the eternal rectangle (yes, rectangle, not triangle, wherein heroes and heroines are chasing each other’s tails in a merry-go-round) can be realigned? All these secrets are laid bare in fun-crammed, thrilling, fuzzy-dizzy pages.