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A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius

Dave Eggers
 
78 %
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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 Heartbreaki... (show more)

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. (show less)

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Reviews (See all 2,891) Write a reviewfor this

It's a hit!

At 21, Dave Eggers lost both his mother and father to unrelated cancers, only about 30 days apart. He then left Chicago and moved to Berkeley (and ... (show more)

At 21, Dave Eggers lost both his mother and father to unrelated cancers, only about 30 days apart. He then left Chicago and moved to Berkeley (and later San Francisco) to raise his 8 year old brother, Toph. AHWoSG is a memoir, detailing that part of his life.

The story could easily be translated into a bestselling tearjerker. Start with Dave's childhood, recall tender moments with his parents. Cue in the sickness, escalating till finally the parents die; Dave goes through a dark period, railing against God; Dave accepts his predicament, raises his brother like a son, and all is well with the world.

Fortunately, the book is much more creative. Rather than dwelling on the (true) plot, the book turns itself inward on Eggers himself; his stream-of-consciousness style is constantly at war with itself, unfolding the intricacies of a tragedy in a way a plot-driven novel never could. At one moment he may have nothing but love for his parents, romanticizing their death. The next he is angry and cynical, portraying them in a disgusting light. He is angry with himself, questioning his motives; is he taking advantage of tragedy? His characters often break free from their true dialog, to criticizing his portrayal of them within the story, his condensing of their lives into convenient plot elements, his portrayal of himself as a hero. Real situations wander off into fantasies; past, present, future, and fiction are weaved together. In the end, it focuses more on the shortcomings of writing and exhibitionism, than on the story which drives it.

Sometimes it's a light and joyful read, describing his daily life experiences in descriptive and almost eerily familiar detail. Other times it spirals chaotically into his own psyche, panicked and furious at the contradiction of taking a beautiful act and, by being intentionally beautiful, perverting it. Still others it is deeply saddening, as he steps back from his inner-conflict to give true insight into the nature of loss.

I didn't always want to pick this book up: the first and last third of the book were each read in one sitting; the middle in about 15. But life also tends to drag on, and this book, more than any other I can recall reading, is an extremely accurate portrayal of that life. Contradictions abound, and questions are left unanswered.

As he throws his mother's ashes into Lake Michigan:
"How lame this is, how small, terrible. Or maybe it is beautiful. I can't decide if what I am doing is beautiful and noble and right, or small and disgusting. I want to be doing something beautiful, but am afraid that this is too small, too small, that this gesture, this end is too small
...
I know what I am doing now, that I am doing something both beautiful but gruesome because I am destroying its beauty by knowing that it might be beautiful, know that if I know I am doing something beautiful, that it's no longer beautiful. I fear that even if it is beautiful in the abstract, that my doing it knowing that it's beautiful and worse, knowing that I will very soon be documenting it, that in my pocket is a tape recorder brought for just that purpose -- that all this makes this act of potential beauty somehow gruesome. I am a monster. She would do this without the thinking, without the thinking about thinking -- (show less)

 
Stephen Miller
 
by Stephen Miller
No, it's a flop!

There are at least three things wrong with the title, for a start.

I felt like letting off fireworks when I finally finished this. I spent most ... (show more)

There are at least three things wrong with the title, for a start.

I felt like letting off fireworks when I finally finished this. I spent most of the second half flipping ahead to see how much more there was to go - rarely a good sign. Yes, Egger's style is refreshing, lively, and entertainingly quirky, but most of the time it's just a screed of words, with nothing behind them. A very long screed.

This read like someone asking to be let off the hook for the feckless, overprivileged youth he's enjoyed. Which I would have been a lot happier to do if he didn't keep disingenuously highlighting how manipulative and selective he's being in writing about it. Very post-modern, but not very persuasive.

I'd probably be a lot less grouchy about this book if so many people didn't keep saying it's the most wonderful book they've ever read. Jesus, people, read more books.

This is not a bad book, it's (possibly) not even a waste of your time. But it's not a great book. (show less)

 
Tony Ellis
 
by Tony Ellis
More Reviews
  • John Terry
    Super_review

    Okay, a little behind the times I know, but I finally got around to this trendsetter work for twenty-somethings who are embarking dangerously into the real world, and who need a crutch (ex: Dave Eggers' life experience) to lean on. Of course, that's not why I read this, or exactly what I took home from it, but I have to admit that I was very, very satisfied with this as a whole.

    Eggers managed to produce something that is both accessible and also self consciously literary, in that "A... (show more)

    Okay, a little behind the times I know, but I finally got around to this trendsetter work for twenty-somethings who are embarking dangerously into the real world, and who need a crutch (ex: Dave Eggers' life experience) to lean on. Of course, that's not why I read this, or exactly what I took home from it, but I have to admit that I was very, very satisfied with this as a whole.

    Eggers managed to produce something that is both accessible and also self consciously literary, in that "A Heartbreaking Work..." manifests itself as a book that is constantly toying around with the relationship between real people and how they are represented as text. Sure, it is autobiographical, but Eggers makes sure throughout the text to remind you that what you are reading is only his representation (although I doubt he would like me to use the word "only"). From times where his 10-year-old brother goes off on intellectual diatribes beyond the reach of his age, to the 60-page long MTV Real World interview format in which he tells large segments of his life story, to times where Eggers blurs the lines in dialogue to the point where you have no idea who's talking - to illustrate that the two participants are momentarily of the same mind (he does this trick where he'll leave out one set of quotation marks to get away with this (AH HA! I caught you Eggers!))

    Okay, but all seriousness aside (and the content of this book IS often serious, with Death constantly running around frantically), this is a FUN book to read, and should entertain high, medium, and no-brows alike. Check it out if you haven't as - and I hope I'm not being too presumptuous by saying this - this could be the book of our generation. (show less)

     
     
    by John Terry on Apr 20, 2009 at 06:27PM

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    Is this review helpful? yes no
     
  • Super_review

    Everything about this book can be gleaned from the apologitory note in the beginning, where the author discusses how he came to choose this title. I preferred the other options. This might have been a pleasant tale of a family dealing with their parents' death if not for the complete over-self-analysis of the author/narrator. One of the first rules of art is never apologize for your work, yet that is all he does.
    There are some brilliantly written passages, though they often lean towards t... (show more)

    Everything about this book can be gleaned from the apologitory note in the beginning, where the author discusses how he came to choose this title. I preferred the other options. This might have been a pleasant tale of a family dealing with their parents' death if not for the complete over-self-analysis of the author/narrator. One of the first rules of art is never apologize for your work, yet that is all he does.
    There are some brilliantly written passages, though they often lean towards the incoherent. The characters are vivid, though it is irritating and self-conscious when they break the fourth wall. There is an excessive use of language to demonstrate that the author is cavalier and cool and isn't afraid of curse words, which goes to show how overly-aware he is. All in all, I enjoyed the story, but suffered a severe sunburn trying to reach the end of the long-winded book. (show less)

     
     
    by Facebook User on Jul 02, 2009 at 10:18PM

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