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How the Water Feels: Stories
 
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How the Water Feels: Stories [Hardcover]

Paul Eggers (Author)

Price: $19.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

December 15, 2002
Paul Eggers’s stories examine the moral arena created by the existence of refugees. Some are stories about literal refugees, those displaced in the aftermath of the Vietnam War, and about those who would help them. Others are about refugees in a metaphoric sense—people alternately bullied and bullying, exiled from sources of power, caught in moments when the familiar gives way.

"The author's ability to evoke milieu is outstanding - one can feel the heat, the presence of the vermin and reptiles, the oppressive rains; in the Tacoma stories, the sordid neighborhoods are alive and teeming. Characters are wonderfully rendered. What is especially striking is the author's capacity to present the intense psychological/emotional pressures under which his characters labor - usually in vain. Another virtue of the book is its topic of the boat people dramatized in four of the stories; these bring the reader into confrontation with an aspect of the Vietnam 'experience' that has received little attention and probes themes of moral anarchy and collapse."-Gordon Weaver

"Eggers is a talented and ambitious writer, and this is an excellent collection. Eggers is not daunted by different cultures. His ability to bring an exotic setting to life reminds me of Paul Theroux. Settings are as vividly renderend here as they are in the best work of Graham Greene. This is a writer who almost never chooses to use shorthand. Eggers's characters are as memorable as the places he writes about."-Steve Yarbrough


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Two alienated, disgruntled communities are on display in Eggers's short story collection: chess players and Southeast Asian refugees. The latter group gets most of the attention, with Eggers reprising some of the themes from his first novel, Savior, about Americans at a Vietnamese refugee camp in Malaysia. While this follow-up effort is uneven, the best stories-set in the late 1970s and early '80s-offer darkly humorous portraits of quirky, vain American naifs and resourceful Vietnamese eccentrics. "Anything You Want, Please" tells the tale of a young Arizona man who falls in love just as he is leaving for a Peace Corps stint in Malaysia, only to have his new lover send him embarrassing, intimate keepsakes once they begin corresponding. In the title story, an English teacher tries to hide his questionable credentials after a new female colleague with better qualifications arrives at the Malaysian refugee camp where he works. "The Year Five" outlines the bureaucratic scandal when a Vietnamese refugee dies in a camp. Interspersed somewhat awkwardly with these pieces are stories exploring the subculture of smalltime American chess competitions, such as "Substitutes" and "The Big Gift," both about Owen Greef, a down-on-his-luck Tacoma, Wash., man who plays in local tournaments and dreams about being in the same room as Bobby Fischer. Parts of these stories simply fall flat, with meandering, directionless dialogue and heavy-handed exposition. Still, Eggers's unconventional scenarios and distinctive voice are promising, and readers willing to put up with the rough patches will find some intriguing material.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From the Author

In how many senses can one be a refugee? There are literal refugees, men and women exiled from their familiar worlds, and then there are metaphoric refugees - those exiled from sources of power, caught in moments in which the familiar gives way to the unfamiliar, people alternately bullied and pitied. My stories range from an exotic refugee camp in Malaysia to the run-down streets of the Pacific Northwest, and examine the moral confusions of those thrust into positions of powerlessness and contingency.

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