Cover Image: The Dinner Party

The Dinner Party

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Member Reviews

A great collection of short stories. I look forward to more by this author.

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Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read and review this book.

I was excited to read this book, even though short stories are not my favorite. But Joshua Ferris' writing makes these so worth reading - and they left me wanting more.

Most of these stories are set in the mundane of the world - moving, going to work, a dinner party - but all have twists of misunderstandings and self-doubt. There was something in each story that left me feeling in tune with what the characters were feeling - although certainly not taking those feelings to the extremes like in these stories!

Kudos to the author for capturing the good and bad of all of us!

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I'm between 4 and 4.5 stars, I think.

Sometimes you love every book an author writes, and other times you have a completely different reaction to every one of their books. Joshua Ferris definitely falls into the latter category for me—Then We Came to the End left me bemused yet ambivalent; I absolutely couldn't get into To Rise at a Decent Hour; and I really enjoyed The Unnamed.

Despite that mixed track record, I still really enjoy the way he writes, so I jumped at the chance to read an early copy of his first story collection, The Dinner Party and Other Stories. Overall, I really enjoyed it—he kept some of the quirks which occasionally throw me in his writing in check, and these stories are compulsively readable. They're fascinating, some are really packed with emotion, some are a little bizarre, and you just want to know how Ferris will tie things up.

Many of the 11 stories in this collection seem fairly innocuous at first, with characters you think you've seen before—a husband dreading another dinner party with his wife's oldest friend and her husband; the retiree who laments growing old alone; a man who is falling to pieces because he believes his wife has left him. But as you delve deeper into these stories, you discover that nothing is quite what it seems, and which gives each story a little bit of an unexpected kick. Sometimes that doesn't quite work, but for the most part, it really does.

Only one story in the collection really didn't excite me, but my favorites included: "The Pilot," in which an insecure writer gets invited to the party of a famous writer he met once, but he wonders if she meant to invite him, and he struggles with whether to go; "The Valetudinarian," about an elderly man struggling with growing old alone, whose life is literally changed by the arrival of an intriguing gift from an estranged friend; "More Abandon, or What Ever Happened to Joe Pope," which tells of a man's exploits in his office after hours; "The Breeze," about a woman who nearly comes undone with the possibilities which arrive with an unexpected spring breeze; "The Stepchild," in which an actor seeks out a woman he met one night, in order to counter his despair that his wife has left him; and the title story, which tells of a couple awaiting friends to come over for a dinner party, despite the fact that the husband is utterly over them.

There were many times in these seemingly simple stories that I was wowed by Ferris' prose. One such example comes from "The Stepchild":

And what you are growing here, and there, and over there, are little moments, and the memories make a life that can't be taken away from you by anyone or anything, not other people's fickleness, not even death. In the long run, you know, that's better than bowls of dried flowers, or whatever.

I don't believe that every person who has been successful at writing novels is as successful writing stories, and vice versa. But I felt that Ferris' storytelling ability was on great display in The Dinner Party and Other Stories. These were stories which really resonated, and worked for me in ways that his novels haven't always succeeded. And even if you've never read any of his books but you're a short story fan, this is a collection worth exploring.

NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company provided me an advance copy of the book in exchange for an unbiased review. Thanks for making this available!

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I appreciate Netgalley for the free ARC. The stories in this book were very interesting. I am sure that someone who likes to read this kind of genre would really appreciate these stories. It was just not for me.

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Not really a fan of the short story but gave it a go seeing that I could read one every night and not lose track of the plot like can happen if it were a full novel. Some of the stories I found interesting but the last chapter "A Fair Price" may be the best one in my opinion.

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A wry read full of short stories with characters whom range from flawed to downright despicable but always come off as above all human. Failing marriages (loss of self/me versus "we" identity), floundering muscularity, "why are we even here?" are themes that pop up through more of the selections than not. Ferris has been playing with many of these themes found here since his much lauded debut Then We Came to the End and has only grown sharper in the intervening years.

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I did not finish this book as I did not engage with the story or the characters.

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