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SCHEMERS, DREAMERS, CHEATERS, BELIEVERS: Stories written during the 2020 pandemic Paperback – December 9, 2020
| Lawrence Grobel (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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- Print length264 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateDecember 9, 2020
- Dimensions5.25 x 0.66 x 8 inches
- ISBN-13979-8561394430
Product details
- ASIN : B08Q71D161
- Publisher : Independently published (December 9, 2020)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 264 pages
- ISBN-13 : 979-8561394430
- Item Weight : 10.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.25 x 0.66 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,285,400 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #34,988 in Short Stories (Books)
- #106,132 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Lawrence Grobel is a freelance writer who has written 29 books and for numerous national magazines and newspapers, including the New York Times, Newsday, Rolling Stone, Entertainment Weekly, Reader's Digest, American Way, Parade, Details, TV Guide, Redbook, Cosmopolitan, Penthouse, Diversion, Writer's Digest, and AARP. He has been a contributing editor at Playboy, Movieline, Hollywood Life, Autograph, New Zealand's World, Bulgaria's Ego, and Poland's Trendy magazines. Playboy called him "the Interviewer's Interviewer" after his interview with Marlon Brando for their 25th anniversary issue; he subsequently made news as the result of his controversial interviews with MN.Gov. Jesse Ventura and former Indiana basketball coach Bob Knight. Between 1968-71 he taught in the Peace Corps at the Ghana Institute of Journalism in West Africa. He created the MFA in Professional Writing program for Antioch University in 1977 and served as its Director for three years. In 1981 he received a National Endowment for the Arts grant for fiction. His 1985 book Conversations with Capote received a PEN Special Achievement award and reached the top of several bestseller lists. Grobel's books include: Conversations with Capote; The Hustons; Conversations with Brando; Talking with Michener; Above the Line: Conversations About the Movies; Endangered Species: Writers Talk About Their Craft, Their Visions, Their Lives; Climbing Higher with Montel Williams (a N.Y. Times bestseller and Publisher's Weekly Best Book in 2004); The Art of the Interview: Lessons from a Master of the Craft (also a Publisher's Weekly Best Book in 2004); You, Talking to Me (120 Lessons Learned from Interviewing); Al Pacino: In Conversation with Lawrence Grobel (awarded the Prix Litteraire from the Syndicate Francfais de la Critique de Cinema for Best International Book of 2009); Conversations with Robert Evans; Conversations with Ava Gardner; Yoga? No, Shmoga! (a yoga satire); Icons (a collection of celebrity profiles); I Want You in My Movie! (Al Pacino's 5 Year Obsession with Wilde Salome); a memoir, You Show Me Yours; Madonna Paints a Mustache, a book of celebrity poems; the novels Catch a Fallen Star and Begin Again Finnegan; 2 novellas: Commando Ex, and The Black Eyes of Akbah; and 2 books of short stories: The Narcissist, and Schemers, Dreamers, Cheaters, Believers. Joyce Carol Oates has called him "the Mozart of interviewers" and J.P. Donleavy has called him "the most intelligent interviewer in the United States." From 2001--2011 he taught seminars on The Art of the Interview, The Literature of Journalism, Articles to Film, and Autobiography & the Memoir at UCLA and returned to teach at UCLA in 2017 & 2020. In 2012 he appeared as himself in Al Pacino's film Wilde Salome and in Shane Salerno's film about J.D. Salinger. He is married to artist and textile designer Hiromi Oda and they have two daughters, Maya and Hana. His blog, books and articles can be found on his website: www.lawrencegrobel.com.
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I have been a fan of Lawrence Grobel for years. He spent his career as a celebrity interviewer/journalist, and put that experience into his books. “Conversations with Al Pacino/Marlon Brando/Truman Capote/James Michener” really got at the essence of his subjects, and were big sellers. Then he taught us his craft with “Art of the Interview,” often used as a college textbook, and less formally with “You, Talking to Me,” a series of quickie lessons he learned from interviewing over a hundred movers and shakers. But in the last few years he has turned his hand to fiction with two Hollywood novels, and now has turned out this, his second book of short stories.
The subject matters are so bizarre it sometimes makes me wonder what Grobel was smoking. Consider the terminally ill teen whose dying wish is to hug an octopus; a man whose fight with a neighbor incites the wrath of crows; a scientist who discovers a person’s last dream determines where he will spend eternity, and the industry that concept creates; an African stowaway hiding in the wheel well of a plane to London; an adult who suddenly dreams that he killed someone as a child and fears it may be real; a program created in which parents can exchange an unruly child for another; the deceased woman who gives her son stock tips through her old hearing aids; a guinea worm that sparks a romance. And it goes on. But perhaps the wildest, yet most realistic is the story of a man who orders shoes from a Chinese vendor, and gets face masks instead. The flurry of emails to rectify this error gets increasingly bizarre, as both the language and culture clashes collide, resulting in laugh-out-loud correspondence.
These are not your average romance/crime/spy thrillers, they don’t feature celebs, and they don’t teach anything; they simply entertain. Full stop, end of story. And that’s good enough for me to give this a five star rating.