. "341"^^ . "Biggest Elvis: A Novel"@en . . . . . "Biggest Elvis: A Novel"@en . . "Biggest Elvis, also known as Biggest Elvis: A Novel, is a novel written by American author P. F. Kluge, an ex-U.S. Peace Corps volunteer in the Pacific region and writer-in-residence at Kenyon College. This 1996 literary piece started out as a journalistic writing for Playboy magazine, to illustrate the nightlife in brothels and nightclubs when fleets of American naval servicemen dock for sailor\u2019s shore-leave on the port of Olongapo City. It is also a portrayal of the entrapment of poverty-stricken residents of Olongapo within a \"military economy\" through the nightly and ritualistic on-stage rebirths, deaths, and resurrections of Elvis Presley by three American copycats living and making a livelihood while in the Philippines."@en . . "0"^^ . . "341"^^ . . . . . "United States"@en . . . . . . . "1124051676"^^ . . . . . . "0-14-025811-6" . . . . . "Penguin" . "Penguin"@en . . . . . . . . . "26441173"^^ . "English"@en . . . . "Book cover for P. F. Kluge's novel Biggest Elvis"@en . . . . "Biggest Elvis: A Novel"@en . . . . . "Biggest Elvis, also known as Biggest Elvis: A Novel, is a novel written by American author P. F. Kluge, an ex-U.S. Peace Corps volunteer in the Pacific region and writer-in-residence at Kenyon College. This 1996 literary piece started out as a journalistic writing for Playboy magazine, to illustrate the nightlife in brothels and nightclubs when fleets of American naval servicemen dock for sailor\u2019s shore-leave on the port of Olongapo City. It is also a portrayal of the entrapment of poverty-stricken residents of Olongapo within a \"military economy\" through the nightly and ritualistic on-stage rebirths, deaths, and resurrections of Elvis Presley by three American copycats living and making a livelihood while in the Philippines."@en . . "1996"^^ . . . . . "6315"^^ .