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1 Obra 72 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

John Glynn is an editor at Hanover Square Press, an imprint of HarperCollins. Previously he was an associate editor at Scribner, where he worked on a diverse list of titles ranging from commercial and literary fiction to narrative nonfiction, memoir, science, journalism, pop culture, and true mostrar más crime. He received his BA in English from Boston College and an MA in English from New York University. In 2018 he was named a Publishers Weekly Star Watch Honoree. Out East, his first book, was published in 2019. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Obras de John Glynn

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Miembros

Reseñas

Self-esteem can be a powerful weapon, but a lack of it can cause us more problems than we could ever imagine.
 
Denunciada
Iqrakhalid | 2 reseñas más. | Sep 12, 2022 |
Out East is a coming-of-age memoir about finding love and identity in the Hamptons party scene. Recent grad John Glynn joins a summer houseshare where his college friends and friends-of-friends will spend weekends in Montauk. The house, known as the Hive, quickly becomes the scene of friend dramas, the beginning and ending of relationships, connections and missed connections, and realizations. This is a personal memoir, so the plot is basically watching people go to the Hamptons and back to the city, drinking a lot and maturing a little.

I enjoyed meeting the Hive tribe, both for the evoking pleasant memories of travel with friends, when travel involved cramming as many people as possible into a rental, but also for a reminder that a lot of that heady friendgroup drama is behind me now. Do I just hang out with fewer people who uncensor their rage after drinking? Or have problem drinkers at 25 learned to drink moderately at 36? Anyway, the toxic drunks in the friendgroup felt terribly familiar, and all of the interpersonal dynamics seemed real. There’s a very honest exploration of the feelings when a group of college friends starts pairing off for marriage, and of the special loneliness found in Manhattan.

This memoir so perfectly describes a lower tier of working Manhattanites. The Hive finds unclaimed Tory Burch flats as they clean their own rental at the end of the summer. Characters take the Jitney back to the office, not a car service. Again, the author perfectly describes the familiar lifestyle of twentysomethings working in Manhattan.

But sometimes the overwhelming success and privilege makes it harder to empathize with the characters’ emotions. I don’t mean that money automatically equals happiness, just that sharing a story of upper-class misery needs more nuance and skill than the “owner of a $3000 handbag” drinking and moaning about never finding love. Setbacks like a character’s failing startup didn’t really move me (even though I loved this character!) because there was such a cushion of privilege around them, I was never actually worried. While the author can be pitch-perfect on twentysomething angst, identity, and friendship, the privileged setting inherent in a Hamptons summer sometimes causes eyerolls instead of connection.
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Denunciada
TheFictionAddiction | 2 reseñas más. | Aug 12, 2020 |
Out East is a sort of coming of age memoir--the crystallization of a summer of weekends at Montauk with friends, where the author begins to find himself. It is at the same time full of surface level ennui from about a group of fairly privileged people getting drunk, and also soul-wrenching self-discovery. The prose is delicious, the book is lovely, and I absolutely was not welling up with tears at the end, I don't know what you're talking about.
 
Denunciada
ablachly | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 3, 2019 |

Estadísticas

Obras
1
Miembros
72
Popularidad
#243,043
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
22

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