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How to Be Alone (book)

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Language
  
English

OCLC
  
49226197

Author
  
Jonathan Franzen

ISBN
  
0-374-17327-3

Country
  
United States of America

3.6/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
October 1, 2002

Originally published
  
1 October 2002

Genre
  
Essay

Publisher
  
Farrar, Straus and Giroux

How to Be Alone (book) t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRoJ5f7v3eTXv16Ac

Cover artist
  
Jacket design by Lynn Buckley Jacket photograph by Greg Martin, taken at the bookstore Three Lives and Company in New York City.

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Pages
  
278 pp (first edition, hardback)

Similar
  
Jonathan Franzen books, Essays, Other books

How to Be Alone is a 2002 book collecting fourteen essays by American writer Jonathan Franzen.

Contents

Essays

Most of the essays previously appeared in The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine, Details, and Graywolf Forum. In the introductory essay, "A Word About This Book," Franzen notes that the "underlying investigation in all these essays" is "the problem of preserving individuality and complexity in a noisy and distracting mass culture: the question of how to be alone."

"The Harper's Essay" and "My Father's Brain"

Included in the collection are "Why Bother?"—a revised version of "Perchance to Dream," Franzen's infamous 1996 Harper's essay on the novelists' obligation to social realism—and "My Father's Brain," nominated for a 2002 National Magazine Award. The latter essay details the elder Franzen's struggle with Alzheimer's, a disease Franzen explored in his 2001 novel The Corrections.

Later additions

The 2003 trade paperback edition includes a fifteenth essay, "Mr. Difficult", on the subject of "difficult" fiction in general and the novels of William Gaddis in particular.

Table of contents

  • "A Word About This Book"
  • "My Father's Brain" (an edited version appeared in The Guardian; see External links)
  • "Imperial Bedroom"
  • "Why Bother?"
  • "Lost in the Mail"
  • "Erika Imports"
  • "Sifting the Ashes"
  • "The Reader in Exile"
  • "First City"
  • "Scavenging"
  • "Control Units"
  • "Books in Bed"
  • "Meet Me in St. Louis"
  • "Inauguration Day, January 2001"
  • Note: In the trade paperback edition "Mr. Difficult" was inserted after "Control Units".

    Reception

    Janet Maslin, in The New York Times, called the book "captivating but uneven"—"this collection emphasizes [Franzen's] elegance, acumen and daring as an essayist, with an intellectually engaging self-awareness as formidable as Joan Didion's. He's funny, too." Maslin praised the essay "My Father's Brain" as "a tough, haunting account." In The New York Times Book Review, critic A.O. Scott discussed Franzen's, "calm, passionate critical authority." Scott closed,

    "At present, in Franzen's humane, pessimistic view, our individuality is under assault from all quarters, and the novel is part of a web of modern institutions—along with the daily mail, the industrial city and the idea of a democratic public sphere—undermined by the irresistible (that is, both unstoppable and undeniably attractive) forces of standardization and privatization. To point this out is, inevitably, to sound like something of a crank, and the accomplishment of this book is to offer its cranky author and his like-minded readers a suitably contradictory and ambiguous consolation: we're not alone."

    References

    How to Be Alone (book) Wikipedia