In
The Universe Next Door, the
President of Unistat is Furbish Lousewart V; in that universe, a terrorist organization known as Purity of Essence (named after General Ripper's obsession in the film
Dr. Strangelove) threatens to detonate nuclear devices in major cities all over Unistat. Also mirroring
Dr. Strangelove, Unistat has an automated device that will send nuclear missiles to
Russia in the event of such an attack. Russia has a similar device to bomb
China, and so on. In
The Trick Top Hat, President Hubbard, promotes a scientific approach to the improvement of life: she offers rewards to anyone who can design a robot to do their job or develop methods to prolong life. Eventually Unistat becomes a
Utopia. She makes the whole law system into three different laws: victimless crimes, which have no punishment; crimes against property, which involve debt and payment; and serious crimes, such as murder, which result in being sent to Hell, a place like jail but not quite. It's encased in
laser shielding and is like a primitive world all its own. It is, in fact, the State of
Mississippi. The original
Pocket Books edition of
The Trick Top Hat contains many passages, some sexually explicit, that are not included in later editions, including the Dell softcover. Much of this material first appeared in Wilson's earlier novel,
The Sex Magicians, published as pornography by Sheffield House in 1973. The third volume,
The Homing Pigeons, features
President Kennedy, although it has very little to do with the President. Near the end of the book it keeps switching universes, some of which contain President Kennedy, others which contain President Lousewort, and still others in which Hubbard is the president. Like
The Trick Top Hat,
The Homing Pigeons also has material in the Pocket Books edition that is not in later editions. Unlike
The Trick Top Hat, however, the material that was cut out did not contain particularly sexually explicit content. The main plots throughout these books are many. One follows Markoff Chaney, a midget, and his pranks played on the world that continuously screws him over. Most of his pranks are played on Dr. Dashwood, of Orgasm Research. However, the most important plot line follows the path of one Hugh Crane which may or may not be this Universe's Hagbard Celine; a character that is an obvious representation of Wilson himself. Another follows an "Ithyphallic Eidolon", a penis removed from a
transsexual woman named Epicene (post-surgery, Mary Margaret) Wildebloode. She puts it on display on her mantelpiece, where it gets stolen. It passes through the vicinity of almost every character in the series at least once. There are dozens of
conspiracy theories,
strange loops,
satire and
paranoia included within those pages. In addition, there are numerous references to other works and occasional outright appropriation of characters from them (including cameos by
Captain Ahab and
Lemuel Gulliver, among others). Many of the character names are either puns ("Bertha van Ation," referring to the 1915 film
The Birth of a Nation, "Juan Tootrego") or references to historical personages (Blake Williams refers to the poet
William Blake, Francis Dashwood's name refers to
Sir Francis Dashwood). ==Tanstagi==