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How We Are Hungry by Dave Eggers
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How We Are Hungry

by Dave Eggers

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1,318112,797 (3.69)21
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Vintage (2005), Paperback, 224 pages

Member:grandgestures
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:Short Stories, Read (Earlier)
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I hated this book - the writing may be excellent but the stories are ugly and largely irredeemably bleak ... and it gave me no pleasure. ( )
  tandah | Feb 5, 2009 |
I liked most of the stories in here. The story from the perspective of Steven the dog was the best, though. hehe! ( )
  lalalibrarian | Sep 6, 2008 |
This was excellent. After the first story, I felt the initial tentacles of dislike curling about, but after the "The Only Meaning of Oil-Wet Water," I had a lot of hope. My favorite was very easily "Quiet." It was, for me, very poignant. I can't really explain it. It have no personal connections to any of the characters, yet, that poignancy is there nonetheless. ( )
  cinesnail88 | Dec 23, 2007 |
A lot of the reviews I'd read of this book have mentioned that they thought Eggers was trying to hard to be literary and that most of the stories were just too self-conscious. And most of them, in their trite way, claimed that the book left them hungry. However, I have to enthusiastically disagree.

I loved this book. Not all the stories are as engaging, and I'm not sure about the extremely short one or two page stories, but I Iove the spiritual-esque feeling that Eggers captures in most of the stories.

Also, the final story in the book, "After I was Thrown in the River and Before I Drowned," is just amazing. I'd actually read in before in Speaking to Angels, a compilation edited by Nick Hornby, but after reading it a second time, I was completely floored. That story alone makes this book completely worth buying this book.

I can't wait for Egger next work, and I hope he continues on his self-conscious, too literary trend, because I like the direction his work is going, even if the critics don't. ( )
  twomoredays | Oct 27, 2007 |
I admit, many of the stories in this book were a bit strage... (per usual for Eggers). His stories often times don't stay with you, but the characters do. By far, my favorite story in this collection was "Up the Mountain Coming Down Slowly" (also the longest story in the collection). Maybe it's because I am an outdoor girl at heart and I love mountain climbing stuff, but this was just an incredable story! Now I can't wait to read What is the What. ( )
  goldiebear | Jul 11, 2007 |
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How We Are Hungry

McSweeney's Books

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0241143071, Hardcover)

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.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:00 -0400)

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