Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Downtown Owl

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
September 16, 2008

Originally published
  
16 September 2008

Page count
  
288

Genre
  
Black comedy

3.5/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publisher
  
Scribner

Pages
  
288

Author
  
Chuck Klosterman

Followed by
  
Eating the Dinosaur

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Media type
  
Print (hardback & paperback)

Preceded by
  
Chuck Klosterman IV: A Decade of Curious People and Dangerous Ideas

Similar
  
Chuck Klosterman books, Other books

Chuck klosterman talks downtown owl and other works


Downtown Owl: A Novel is a novel written by Chuck Klosterman, first published by Scribner in 2008. It is the author's first all-fictional publication.

Contents

Holland tunnel downtown owl book review


Plot outline

The story describes the fictional town of Owl, North Dakota, in which three characters are intangibly connected. Horace is an old man who spends his afternoons in the local coffee shop with other old men, shaking dice to see who pays for coffee, and talking about politics, religion, and memorable Owl football teams of the past. Mitch is a stoic high school backup quarterback who is depressed for no apparent reason. Julia is the newest resident of Owl. She moved to the small town to teach history and spends much of her free time at the local bars (where she meets local celebrity Vance Druid). The town has about 850 residents and is semi-isolated from 1980s music and culture. As a climax, the three main characters are caught in a sudden blizzard—Horace and Julia stuck in their cars and Mitch outdoors.

Possible film adaption

In October 2012, Gettin' Rad Productions, the production company owned by Adam Scott and his wife, Naomi Scott, optioned the movie rights to Downtown Owl. “It’s lovely and moving and funny. We just thought it’s a really great story about people that I relate to but also small enough that it would make a good first film out of the gate for us," Adam Scott was quoted in The Hollywood Reporter. However, no further updates on the film project have been released since then.

Film School Rejects writer Neil Miller said, "This book is rich with unique and interesting characters and situations that would be perfect matches for a Coen-esque romp through 1983 rural North Dakota."

References

Downtown Owl Wikipedia


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