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6 Reviews
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Funny, Jarring, Creepy,
By The Butler (San Diego) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Insomniac Reader: Stories of the Night (Future Tense) (Paperback)
I bought this collection for the Jonathan Lethem story, which turned out to be a funny tale about phone sex and call waiting. I was surprised by the variety of stories here. Thorn Kief Hillsbery writes a disturbing tale of street kids and the creeps that love them, Jonathan Ames offers another hilarious story about his night life, Stacey Richter writes with a strange drug-like tone that is highly charged, Richard Rushfield's story on a stalkers club manages to be creepy, funny, and weirdly honest, and Marshall Moore--a talented writer I hadn't heard of before--end the book with a deceptive little noir. A sort of suicide note with a twist. Ricky Moody has a nice, heartfelt story in here too. As does Davy Rothbart. Another name to watch out for: Elizabeth Ellen. Her story here is relentless.
A strong and impressive collection.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not Your Usual Paint-by-Numbers Collection,
By Joe Brett (Boston) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Insomniac Reader: Stories of the Night (Future Tense) (Paperback)
The thing about most anthologies is they sometimes try too hard. They cover too much territory and lose focus of the real essence of the subject. The Insomniac Reader, while not literally being about insomnia, is a great unwavering collection of stories that all take place at night. D.E. Baker mentions something about kitsch in his review below but I don't see it. There's a darker sensibility happening in many stories--drugs and sex of course, but also lost friendship (in the Rick Moody story), hospital mayhem (in the Stacey Richter story), loneliness (Day Rothbart, Elizabeth Ellen, Monica Drake), and street hustling (Thorn Kief Hillsbery). I should also mention that there's some really funny stuff in here too. A few of the "big names" miss the mark but those pieces are the shortest. Overall, this is a collection with many moods and a consistently strong literary quality.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Better than No-Doz,
By Tod H "Tod H" (Seattle) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Insomniac Reader: Stories of the Night (Future Tense) (Paperback)
Like the cover art depicting a blurry swervedriving ride down a dark freeway, this book will keep you on your toes with your hands tight on the steering wheel. There are a variety of styles and moods here. The disturbing stories are really disturbing. The funny stories are really funny. The odd stories are really odd. The editor, Kevin Sampsell, has been publishing small books on his own small press (Future Tense) for years and this is a good forum for his curating and editing skills. I think the best stories here are from Michelle Tea, Davy Rothbart, Elizabeth Ellen, and Heidi Julavits. If you feel like you don't get out at night enough, you could read this collection for a vicarious thrill.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
variety is the spice of life,
This review is from: The Insomniac Reader: Stories of the Night (Future Tense) (Paperback)
It's not that frequent to read an anthology where each piece is unique but does not lose the integrity of the larger theme. Why do we sleep or not sleep? How does the world change under the cover of darkness? Is the only real difference the people you meet (beep beep)? A comfortingly disturbing collection that reminds us for every Deuce Bigalow there is a mad film student on the cusp of brilliance or destruction.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Insomniac Reader : Stories of the Night,
By j "p" (WA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Insomniac Reader: Stories of the Night (Future Tense) (Paperback)
My eyes fixed on the names of the textually beguiling Aimee Bender and the hilarity plus Jeff Johnson. The next thing I knew I was gobbling up the Insomniac Reader like bulimic with choco-nilla ice cream over a toilet. I HAD to keep reading. Kief Thorn Hillsbury's story, an excerpt from his upcoming book, had the Hunter S. Thompson let's-get-f***ked-up-and-take-a-ride-together hypnosis. Unknown to me Monica Drake journals through a college girls night of appealing debauchery and self-doubt, Davy Rothbart of the fab Found magazine snaps a delightful photo of life as an adult living for 3 months with his recently widowed Grandma. The varied tones and drifting from fiction to non-fiction of each story read like the REM dream state on the page.
0 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
YIKES!,
This review is from: The Insomniac Reader: Stories of the Night (Future Tense) (Paperback)
I was anticipating a much better collection than what was delivered. Too much kitsch and not enough substance. I have long been fasinated by life that is hightlighted by the shadows. There were instances of good writing and characterization, but overall I was left wanting much more. Skip this collection and move on to something else.
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The Insomniac Reader: Stories of the Night (Future Tense) by Kevin Sampsell (Paperback - January 1, 2005)
$13.95 $12.92
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