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Dave King (1) (1955–)

Author of The Ha-Ha

For other authors named Dave King, see the disambiguation page.

1+ Work 889 Members 35 Reviews 1 Favorited

Works by Dave King

The Ha-Ha (2005) 889 copies, 35 reviews

Associated Works

Tagged

2005 (9) 2007 (5) 2010 (5) 21st century (6) addiction (18) ARC (5) audiobook (6) baseball (5) children (7) communication (5) contemporary fiction (10) disabilities (7) disability (10) drugs (8) family (18) fiction (133) friendship (9) mute (12) novel (17) own (8) read (14) relationships (10) to-read (23) unread (8) veteran (7) veterans (9) Vietnam (13) Vietnam vet (6) Vietnam War (18) war (6)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
King, Dave
Birthdate
1955
Gender
male
Education
Columbia University (MFA, 2000)
Occupations
painter (artistic)
author
Relationships
Tartaglione, Franklin (partner)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Meriden, Connecticut, USA
Places of residence
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Meriden, Connecticut, USA (birth)
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

36 reviews
THE HA-HA (2005) is one of the best reads I've run across in many years, and it was Dave King's first novel too. (And his only one, so far as I can tell.) I vaguely remember reading about it when it was new, but then I forgot about it until I saw it on a library sale table last month for half a buck. What a bargain! It was apparently a minor bestseller and I'm not surprised. It's the story of a brain-damaged mute whose humdrum life as a grounds keeper at a convent is totally changed, show more enlivened and enriched when he is tasked with looking after his former girlfriend's nine year-old son for a couple months while she goes into drug rehab. Howard Kapostash is a Vietnam vet who has been unable to speak, read or write for nearly thirty years after stepping on a land mine. And yet, as the unlikely narrator of this frank and touching story, he can still think, reason and understand. He lives in the large Victorian home of his now deceased parents with three tenants: Laurel is the Texas-raised child of Vietnamese refugees who makes and sells gourmet soups, and Steve and Harrison are a pair of house painters. This disparate group becomes gradually closer and forms a family of sorts after the biracial boy, Ryan, moves in. As Howard becomes increasingly attached to the boy, getting him onto a ragtag summer baseball team, numerous memories come flooding back, of his high school romance with Sylvia, and of his long and difficult rehabilitation and his parents' unstinting help and loyalty, even as Sylvia drifted off into other affairs and drug addiction, something Howard got into too for a time. But the memories he can never quite bring into focus are the ones from his very short-lived - just sixteen days - tour in Vietnam and the months and years of fruitless attempts at recovery - of speech, reading and writing. Because this is a war story, make no mistake. Despite the warm and fuzzy elements of Howard's newfound, makeshift family, the horrors and devastating, lifelong effects of war are never far from his mind, and, consequently, loom large in the reader's mind too. Author Dave King is not a veteran, but with THE HA-HA he has somehow managed to climb inside the mind of a severely damaged victim of that long ago war and tell a story that will resonate with readers for a long time. Put this book on your War Lit shelf, because that's where it belongs. Bravo, Mr King. Bravo! My very highest recommendation.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
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Gosh I loved this book! It was well written, unique and thoughtful.This is a character driven novel by a first time novelist. The main character, Howard, suffered a traumatic head injury 16 days into his tour in Vietnam and hasn't spoken since. King does a tremendous job having a character who doesn't speak say so much and I really felt the frustrations and moments of sadness that would come from dealing with people who can't or won't try to understand you. The relationships are fraught and show more tender and so very compelling. I think this novel is a little gem and think it was mostly overlooked when released in 2006. show less
3.5 stars

Howie was in Vietnam for the war. He was injured and came home unable to talk. He has not been able to since, nor did he re-learn to read and write. His best friend (and former high-school girlfriend), Sylvia, calls on him to take care of her 9-year old son, Ryan, while she is off to rehab. Lucky for Howie, he has three other people living in his house. Laurel lives there without paying rent, but she helps Howie out. Two other rooms are rented out to young men, Harrison and Steve show more (he calls them Nit and Nat: he doesn’t like them much!).

This was good. There was a lot of “guy” stuff in the book, but with Howie and Ryan as main characters, becoming almost like father and son, one should expect that. It was nice how the household came together to help out with Ryan (though none were used to having a kid around the house!). I didn’t like Sylvia much, but then Howie did some stupid things, too.
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½
This was surprisingly solid read, with more depth than I had anticipated. The main character Howard struggles out of his solitary existence-- just to get kicked in the teeth for his trouble. But we come to accept that the crappy real world and its disappointments are better than going through life disconnected. The one fault I have with the work is the formulaic method of creating instant depth- add one troubled at-risk child and stir. Poof. Emotional live wire. But when you get into the show more nitty-gritty angst of the real story, King delivers a degree of emotion that is gut-wrenchingly believable. show less

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Statistics

Works
1
Also by
1
Members
889
Popularity
#28,823
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
35
ISBNs
64
Languages
7
Favorited
1

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