A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius | Dave Eggers | The whole is better than some parts.
books:
A Heartbreaking Wo...
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Dave Eggers
Vintage
, 2001 - 496 pages
average customer review:
based on 909 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
The literary sensation of the year, a book that redefines both family and narrative for the twenty-first century. A
Heartbreaking
Work
of
Staggering
Genius
is the moving memoir of a college senior who, in the space of five weeks, loses both of his parents to cancer and inherits his eight-year-old brother. Here is an exhilarating debut that manages to be simultaneously hilarious and wildly inventive as well as a deeply heartfelt story of the love that holds a family together.
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius is an instant classic that will be read in paperback for decades to come. The Vintage edition includes a new appendix by the author.
for more information click here
Hyperboles Aside; Read It and See...
"Well they say its kind of frightening how this younger generation swings, You know its more than just some new sensation... At an early age he hits the streets, wind up tied with who he meets / You know its more than just an aggravation." --David Lee Roth, from Van Halen's "The Cradle Will Rock," from their seminal 1980
work
"Women and Children First"
So it may be a little ridiculous starting off a literary review with some credible quasi-fiction book like Eggers, "A
Heartbreaking
Work of
Staggering
Genius
," (heretoforeafter referred to as AHWOSG) but there is something in it that is pertinent, something I believe Eggers with his way of writing what is available to his mind at the moment, though seemingly irrelevant, would approve of. So to title your debut book, AHWOSG, borders on the absurd side of hyperboles, in the end when one is finished reading, this almost can't put down work...is not a far-off description. It's that good my friends, read on and you may be convinced.
So back to David Lee Roth waxing poetic and philosophical, which are two descriptors rarely associated with the lyrical works of Van Halen, Roth years. What AHWOSG does, less concisely mind you, is capture a voice of a generation. The book does a lot of things, but this summing up of the Gen Y, the Internet Generation, or better yet, The YouTube Generation's media savvy need for an audience on a broad scale seems to be something Eggers does most successfully, Is it a generational treatise? Perhaps not quite that, because after all, can you capture in a work of literature all the voices, feelings, experiences of a whole generation. Probably not. But as Eggers proves, you can come pretty darn close.
Just get a gander at this writing, before you go on to purchase this book (or however in your corner of the world you acquire fiction to consume), "What does it take to show you mf's, what does it freakin' take what do you want how much do you want because I am willing and I'll stand before you and I'll raise my arms and give you my chest and throat and wait, and I've been so old for so long, for you, for you, I want it fast and right through me---- Oh do it, do it, you mf's, do it do it you f's finally, finally, finally." That's the last passage from AHWOSG and it caps off a really really moving read. Those are the words from an author that really really craves an audience. And so it may be with a generation brought up on an expectation that it just isn't the "15 minutes of fame," we are all seeking and due...but the way one connects is through mass media. A mass audience validates ones existence or at the very least, helps them deal with any human pain they may be suffering in the present.
Eggers, granted, has a lot of reasons to be experiencing angst. Whereas the Gen X'ers, my generation, are thought of as largely cynical with no clear valid reason to cop that permanent attitude, Egger's generation has plently of reason to be dislocated and distraught, the music of Radiohead only one small cultural influencer, not to mention 9/11, wars, real wars, not some mamby pamby skirmishes in Grenada and The Falklands. This is the generation that could very well go down in history as the Next Great Generation, following in the footsteps of the boomers who saved the world from certain peril during War War II.
What is Eggers' AHWOSG like you may want to know? After all why would you still be reading my random stream-of-consciousness review...still? It's about loss, staggering loss. It's about coming of age prematurely when one's parents pass at age 22, leading to the taking on of guardianship for your younger high school aged brother. It's about the search for meaning in one's life through work, friends and family. It's about life, man, just read it and get back out there living it.
To go on further may dilute any type of message I'm trying to send you with this review. What I'd like to do is just to convince you to read this book. You may in some small way find yourself looking at your own life, in light to Eggers', differently. You may in some larger way get to know and understand a generation, perhaps your own, perhaps someone elses. What you won't get from AHWOSG is boredom. And in a life, the pursuit of entertainment and moreso engagement, seems a worthwhile cause, if only to enlighten and give cause to live. ...mmw
for more information click here
The whole is better than some parts.
The book as a whole is much better than some of the parts. Dave Eggers has written a raw, emotional memoir of the years immediately following the death of both parents. He becomes the guardian of a younger brother and is also trying to begin his own career as a writer. Eggers is witty, sarcastic, pretenious and possibly
genius
, but this book was not easy for me to read. Some parts were laugh out loud funny. Some were gut-wrenchingly brutal. Some were loving, poignant and sad. Then, there were parts that I felt I would never get through and it wasn't until I was finished that I really appreciated what Eggers had accomplished. Several times in telling his story, Eggers goes off on narrative tangents that don't really move the story. These border on stream of conscienciousness, but are just hard to follow, as are some sections of dialogue. (I was torn between 3 or 4 stars, because it was just hard to get through at times.)
So why does this book have such high praise? Eggers is funny and honest. This memoir succeeds in giving an clear picture of one young adult's life and his thoughts as he strives to deal with his grief, become a parent to his much younger brother and carve out a successful career as writer and publisher. Eggers was idealistic enough to think he could do just that. I found myself wanting to like this book because of what Eggers was trying to accomplish.
If you pick up this book and make it through the preface and first chapter (it may not be easy), go ahead and finish. I think you will be glad you did. Then check out Eggers
work
as a philanthropist and teacher-at-large. Now that deserves high praise indeed!
for more information click here
Emotionally evocative, but wordy
I bought this book because of all the rave reviews from critics and the because it was a Pulitzer finalist. I read the first one-third of the story and really enjoyed his candid writing style. I am from the Bay Area and too lost my mother at an early age, so I really related to both his accounts of Berkeley/SF life and people, as well as grieving the loss of a parent at a young age. His anger toward the insensitivity of others was frank. His urgency to protect his little brother from the realities of death and loss are memorable. His writing style is both vivid and candid, however very very detailed. At first this was interesting and kept my attention, but after the first 5 chapters or so, was a slow moving book. I found myself skipping chapters. Overall a decent read though.
for more information click here
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
,
8
,
9
,
10
products you might be interested in
recommendations
Books that stay with me (metaphorically that is)
West End Book Group's Book Possibilities
Books I Can't Part With
Books Tima Should Read
A Lifetime of Reading
heartbreaking
Backyard Giants: The Passionate, Heartbreaking, and Glorious Quest to ...
The Elephant in the Playroom: Ordinary Parents Write Intimately and ...
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Heartbreaking Grace: The Embrace of Helplessness
Balloons on the Mailbox: One Mothers Heartbreaking Story of Her ...
staggering
Marketing Outrageously: How to Increase Your Revenue by Staggering ...
Coping With Texas and Other Staggering Feets
Money Changes Everything: Twenty-Two Writers Tackle the Last Taboo ...
A Staggering Revolution: A Cultural History of Thirties Photography
Cross-X: The Amazing True Story of How the Most Unlikely Team from ...
genius
Forgotten Ways, The: Reactivating the Missional Church
The Genius: How Bill Walsh Reinvented Football and Created an NFL ...
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Benjamin Franklin: An American Life
Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla : Biography of a Genius ...
search for books
genius
,
heartbreaking
,
staggering
,
work
toavi.com
web
randomly chosen
apparel:
Vigoss Junior's Straight Leg Jean with Lurex Back Pockets
Home
Sitemap I
Sitemap II