Review:
This is a superb collection, and it proves that Benioff can handle the long and the short of the fiction game (Publishers Weekly)
American men are Benioff's terrain. On his home turf he's briliant. Benioff's gaunt but never scrawny prose is perfect for these stories. This style, a pared-down realism enlivened by the occasional fantastic flourish, acts as an elegant summation of the author's apparently complex relationship with fiction. (Literary Review)
Deliciously accessible stories . . . will hook you fast, and they'll keep you hooked (Kirkus Reviews)
All [the stories] are highly charged portraits of young men on the cusp of something momentous, be it their first war or their first love affair. Benioff is particularly good at using the compressed lives of lonely individuals to convey something of an incomprehensible world beyond. (Metro)
The latest master of the zippy, punchy, knee-to-the-groin story is David Benioff . . . Wonderful collection (Independent on Sunday)
An ace storyteller (Entertainment Weekly)
All [the stories] are highly charged portraits of young men on the cusp of something momentous, be it their first war or their first love affair. Benioff is particularly good at using the compressed lives of lonely individuals to convey something of an incomprehensible world beyond.. The best story, The Barefoot Girl in Clover, is also the simplest . . . Its potent atmosphere of lost adolescence lingers like heat on tarmac. (Metro)
A short story collection as good as this is a reminder of how pleasurable reading can be. In his crisp use of language, his neat way with a twist and his fondness for the elliptical, Benioff displays his screenwriting credentials... The title story is both funny and sharp, displaying an unexpected warmth towards his characters. The Devil Comes Home is even better, describing the terrible dilemma faced by a young Russian soldier . . . When The Nines Roll Over has its own, sharply original quality; worth reading for its humour, description of character and the oddity of its insights. (The Times)
The book's eight stories are written with both a literary writer's care and a film writer's instinct for courting his readers or viewers. He hooks them, reels them in and does his best to make them happy to be in the boat with him -- until he lets them go a few hours later (USA Today)
Benioff has taken the world and cut it into hard, bright diamonds. These stories are luminous (Ann Patchett)
Book Description:
'A deeply satisfying collection of unusual, resonant and beautifully composed stories. David Benioff is one of the most promising writers of his generation' - George Pelecanos
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