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4 Reviews
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Highly recommended!,
By
This review is from: Happy Trails to You: Stories (Hardcover)
I have avidly awaited this sequel to Hecht's wonderful first story collection (Do the Windows Open?), and was thrilled to find that this collection is deeper, wiser, more mature, and a joy to read. I have just finished it and want to immediately re-read it. The writing is delicate and elegant, with sudden hilarious moments, and although the narrator could be described as rigid, neurotic and judgmental, she also comes across as deeply sensitive, intelligent and caring - i.e., very human - a wonderful sleight of hand for an author. Many of the stories are almost perfectly crafted and all are subtly understated. I love this author and I love this book.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Delicacy,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Happy Trails to You: Stories (Hardcover)
Julie Hecht writes rarely, but when she does it is with a rare delicacy. She describes the everyday, but with a special sensitivity, and always, absurdity, though not of the obvious sort. She describes the gift of a pair of mittens, an encounter with an actor-waiter, her relationship with her cleaning lady, with a mixture of bemusement and outright bewilderment. I feel Julie Hecht is a stranger on her home turf, and especially, a stranger in 21st century America, or what this country has become. I wish we could be friends, but that would be impossible, since I live in New York City and my food choices would deeply offend her sensibilities. In fact, her intolerance in a hyper-tolerant culture is one of her most attractive qualities. Her doctrinaire insistence on standards, albeit standards that are politically liberal and nutritionally vegan, is again, charming, because it is deeply rooted in an at-times off-kilter humanity. I was disappointed, though, in the last story, where a bizarre interview leads to poignant reflections on the state of the culture and the ignorance of young people. It was to me too much, it veered off the atmosphere of hothouse sensibility that Julie Hecht's narrator previously had inhabited. But the story that culminates in her taking down the American flag, and particularly, the reason why she takes it down, is deeply patriotic, albeit in an offbeat, quirky way. A fine follow up to her brilliant Do the Windows Open?
8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
"Happy Trails" leads the reader down a disappointing road.,
By Readers Reader (Sayreville, New Jersey) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Happy Trails to You: Stories (Hardcover)
I read another book by this author and I found it amusing and touching. I also enjoyed her New Yorker stories very much. This book, however, is like the experience of having dinner with someone, however interesting, who keeps trying to force their political agenda down your throat. It really should be tagged as a political book since a large percentage of the stories are a push for liberalism and go on and on about her extreme dislike for Republicans. Every time a story stars drawing in the reader, her political views and intolerance get in the way...going overboard, ruining it. I don't want to be preached to by Democrats or Republicans unless I'm watching a political analysis show on CNN or some other news channel. She touched on political themes in her other book, but it wasn't the main focus, and you got a good feel for her politics but more so about her life as an eccentric and the way she deals with anxiety, self-centered friends, kooky people, and her feeling of being alone in the world. In this collection, most of the stories have a left leaning preachy feel (also about being a vegan), which is as boring and annoying as being accosted by a over zealous campaigner on the sidewalk. Ms. Hecht is much better when she is observing the strangeness of people and her own neurotic reactions to life in modern times.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
saves the best for last,
By
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This review is from: Happy Trails to You: Stories (Paperback)
Reading this book was an interesting experience. The author is playing around with different things. The writing is very clear and distinct but what she's communicating is subtle. Like Hemmingway, but more satirical. Sometimes the stories in this book seemed to be concerned with emptiness, but I couldn't really say for sure what's in the author's mind. The last story in the book made the whole book worth putting up with the annoying, self-absorbed snobby narrator.
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Happy Trails to You: Stories by Julie Hecht (Hardcover - May 6, 2008)
$24.00
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