“Waste not, want not,”
says the old adage. “Stuff,” we all
have too much of it. This novel
alternates the stories of a freegan couple, living in an abandoned building and
living out of dumpsters; a lonely linguist whose wife has abandoned him and
whose scholarly father is descending into dementia; a hapless young man whose
family has thrown him out; and a man whose wealth is based on hounding people
to pay long-forgiven debts and supports a lavish life and trophy wife on the
profits. It is clever, thoughtful and
well-written, but I felt that the alternating stories were confusing. The individual stories brim with detail and
their characters are complex. It always
took me a couple pages to get back into the characters in each section. It might
have, for me, worked better as a collection of inter-related novellen. Nonetheless, I recommend it, and his earlier Dear American Airlines, highly. 390 pp.
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