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Hardcover How We Are Hungry Book

ISBN: 1932416137

ISBN13: 9781932416138

How We Are Hungry

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

How We Are Hungry is a gripping, lyrical, and always intensely soulful group of stories written over the past four years. Though they range from a doomed Irish setter's tales of running and jumping ("After I Was Thrown in the River and Before I Drowned") to a bitterly comic meditation on suicide and friendship ("Climbing to the Window, Pretending to Dance"), the stories share a haunting and haunted sense of mortality. Though full of bursts of levity and humor, the book is deeply informed by the troubled times in which it was written. How We Are Hungry includes many never-before-published stories, along with a number of pieces that first appeared in magazines, both well known (Zoetrope, The New Yorker) and small and independent (h2s04, Ninth Letter). All previously published stories have been significantly revised. The urgency and experimentalism of Eggers's earlier work are still present, but are brought to a new level of precision and craft, injecting fresh life into traditional forms. Narratives are often linear, told by distinct and varied voices, and settings stretch from Egypt to Interstate 5.

Dave Eggers presents his first collection of short stories. The characters are roaming, searching, and often struggling, and revelations do not always arrive on schedule. Precisely crafted and boldly experimental, How We Are Hungry simultaneously embraces and expands the boundaries of the short story.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Gasp, Literature?!

Dave eggers is easily one of the most approachable authors alive today. Filled with wit and humor, it is likely any infrequent reader would fall in love with him. However, underneath this vail of seducing the illiterate, is an author who crafts stories so original and beautiful and full of meaning, that I'm convinced everyone would love his work, and this book specifically. That said, "After I Was Thrown in the River and Before I Drowned" is, to me, one of the best short stories I have ever come across. It has everyhting a good story needs, and though maybe not ALL the stories in here are for everyone, surely people will find a story they love and identify so strongly with, as I have.

It's good to be hungry.

Dave Eggers is a great writer. Some like to say he's too ironic. Others like to say he's too sincere. And that's because he's both ironic and sincere, which makes him a paradox, and also makes him easy to misunderstand, willfully or not. And really, what we're talking about here is not Dave Eggers, but the man's writing. Remember that. Eggers' writing is ironic and sincere and beautiful and well-crafted, and it is challenging. Which means that it might not be what you think it is at first glance, even when you like it right away. Eggers has a great mind. And he has an expansive eye for detail, for characters and flaws and very real absurdities, and for the joys and pains of life. For that I thank him.

In the tradition of Nabokov and George Saunders

I loved the story I read from this collection in the Best Magazine Writing of 2003 because the sentences were Nabokovian. Who knew surfing could be described with sentences that make you want to cry? But reading this collection I see that Dave Eggers is up to more than pretty sentences. His stories are timely and, many of them, allegorical. They resemble George Saunders's work in that they, too, create a mirror that reflects our human condition and political situation more clearly than we were able to see it before.

Staggering genius.

Dave Eggers has always been too clever by half, and often that resulted in prose getting in the way of plot. Short stories, therefore, are the perfect medium for him, as he can dazzle with words without being bound to develop characters or advance a story (although the few longer stories in the book are surprisingly good). There's not a dud in the book; I'd love to see him publish another volume.

Brings new life to the short story genre

Just when I thought I knew what to expect from the short story or from the yawn-inducing term "short story collection," Eggers's new book came along and blew me away. The stories vary in length (some are a paragraph) and location (Egypt, Costa Rica). Some have no words at all (that should keep you guessing). But each of them is full of invention and beauty, humor and concern, joy and hunger. You don't get the feeling when reading this book, as you do with other collections, that certain stories were inserted just to pad out the pages. Each one is a surprise and stands on its own as a beautiful object. And the collection raises the bar for other short story writers. My vote for the best collection of the year. Hands down.
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