All Our Happy Days Are Stupid
By (Author) Sheila Heti
McSweeney's Publishing
McSweeney's Publishing
10th March 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
812.6
Paperback
128
Width 115mm, Height 153mm
100g
Two couples, each with a twelve-year-old child, travel to Paris; within a few moments of discovering each other in a crowd, one of their children disappears. A day later, one of the mothers disappears, too. The story that follows is a wonderfully strange, beautifully composed examination of happiness and desperation, complete with a man in a bear suit, a teen pop star, and eight really excellent songs.
Sheila Heti's debut play was first commissioned in 2001, for a feminist theater company that never ended up staging it. Its turbulent creation became the backdrop of Heti's last novel,How Should a Person Be, which was named a Best Book of the Year by theNew York Timesand theNew Yorkerand now the play itself can be revealed at last. With new introductions by Sheila Heti and director Jordan Tannahill,All Our Happy Days Are Stupidoffers a novel's worth of wisdom and humor, of wild hope and dreamlike confrontations, and page after page of unforgettable lines. Seen until now only by a lucky few, its publication is a cause for celebration.
Sheila Heti is the author of six books of fiction and non-fiction, three of them collaborations. Her latest book is Women in Clothes.