Happy Trails to You: Stories
By (Author) Julie Hecht
Simon & Schuster
Simon & Schuster
1st August 2009
United States
General
Fiction
FIC
Paperback
224
Width 140mm, Height 214mm, Spine 15mm
239g
Now in paperback, the newest collection of stories from the acclaimed author of Do the Windows Open, Was This Man a Genius, and The Unprofessionalsa brilliant, complex work that delivers more of the exquisitely funny and beautifully observant prose that draws ardent praise from critics and readers.
An exceptional author: Julie Hechts fiction has appeared in The New Yorker and Harpers, and her books have received spectacular reviews from The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, Time, and many other publications. All of the authors books have been named New York Times Notable Books.
A singular character: At her first appearance, Hechts anxious, beguiling, and anonymous photographer-narrator was an instant literary icon. Her strategiesmacrobiotics, herbal remedies, a bit of Xanaxfor surviving civilizations decline have established her as one of the most enthusiastically read voices of the last decade.
Our postmodern world, re-examined: With an unwavering gaze on the absurdities and ironies of the larger world, Happy Trails to You recounts the narrators attempts to find a place of unspoiled nature on the once peaceful island of Nantucket, where power mowers, nail guns, and speeding trucks have blocked out the sounds of birdsong and crickets. A visit to a friend or restaurant touches upon every subject from the color of paint to the world situation and infinity.
"Julie Hecht's new collection is funny, acerbic, angry, intelligent, and totally original. Her writing mixes horror and hilarity. I love her voice." - Roz Chast
"But as times have changed, so has [the book's] character -- wonderfully, bracingly so. Hecht's latest story collection, Happy Trails to You, is piloted by the same half-babbling, half-deadpan voice, now with larger, more political concerns...These aren't merely the worries of an eccentric middle-aged East Coast vegetarian; they're the all-too-common concerns of the mainstream liberal consciousness. In the new century, Hecht's narrator is suddenly less alone in her alarm and alienation, finding more kindred spirits than ever before...But Hecht plays with this stereotype on many levels, and the collection's strongest moments describe a frustration with civilization that can't be blamed solely on psychosis." -- Katherine Hill, Bookforum
Julie Hecht is the author of The Unprofessionals, Was This Man a Genius: Talks with Andy Kaufman, and Do the Windows Open Her stories have been published in The New Yorker and Harpers. She has won an O. Henry Prize and received a Guggenheim Fellowship. She lives on the east end of Long Island in winter and spring, and massachusetts in summer and fall.