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By Etgar Keret

Short Stories/Novellas

Showing 4 of 4 books in this series
Cover for Kneller's Happy Campers

Master short story writer Etgar Keret turns his hand to a longer tale, Kneller’s Happy Campers , which was recently turned into the cult film Wristcutters: A Love Story , starring Tom Waits and Shannon Sossamon.

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Cover for Cheesus Christ

Author Etgar Keret is known for his uncanny ability to cover an incredible amount of ground in an extremely short story. His writing is at times funny, satirical, dark, and profound, and his narratives intertwine the abstract and the everyday in creative and surprising ways. Cheesus Christ , a short story from Suddenly, A Knock on the Door , is no exception. In just ten minutes, narrator Dave Eggers brings us from a man dying in a fast-food restaurant, to the inner thoughts of the restaurant’s manager and later to those of the company’s tortured CEO, then on tour through a doctor’s tragic past, and onto the butterfly effect, all in an enlightening, amusing, and strangely cohesive way. Cheesus Christ will at once leave you thoroughly satisfied and hungry for more from Etgar Keret.

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Cover for Grab the Cuckoo by the Tail

Author Etgar Keret is known for his uncanny ability to cover an incredible amount of ground in an extremely short story. His writing is at times funny, satirical, dark, and profound, and his narratives intertwine the abstract and the everyday in creative and surprising ways. In Grab the Cuckoo by the Tail , a short story from Keret's Suddenly, A Knock on the Door , Uzi attempts to cheer up his friend Dedi, depressed after the end of a failed romance, by convincing him they will get rich by investing in the stock market. In just ten minutes, Grab the Cuckoo by the Tail will simultaneously leave you thoroughly satisfied and hungry for more Etgar Keret.

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Cover for Todd

Do not let Etgar Keret deceive you. The Israeli writer who's worked in film, illustration, animation, and radio, is a storyteller in all senses of the word. Like a conman, he'll promise you a simple story and then the next thing you know your emotional reserves have been completely emptied. It's a literary bait and switch, and he'll get you every time. Here, in “Todd,” a story that also challenges the boundaries between literature and reality, Etgar directly engages with the wonderful deception of fiction itself. The titular friend asks the narrator, who resembles Etgar—an Israeli short story writer who frequently appears on NPR—to write a story that'll help him get girls into bed. The narrator must then explain that writing doesn't work that way: "A story isn't a magic spell or hypnotherapy," the narrator claims, and yet that is exactly what happens here. About Recommended Reading: Great authors inspire us. But what about the stories that inspire them? Recommended Reading, the latest project from Electric Literature, publishes one story every week, each chosen by a great author or editor. In this age of distraction, we uncover writing that's worth slowing down and spending some time with. And in doing so, we help give great writers, literary magazines, and independent presses the recognition (and readership) they deserve. About the author: Etgar Keret's writing has been published in The New York Times, Le Monde, The Guardian, The Paris Review, The New Yorker, and Zoetrope among other publications. More than 40 short films have been made based on his stories. His work has been translated into 31 languages and published in over 35 countries. He received the Chevalier Medallion of France’s Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in 2010. His short story collections include The Bus Driver Who Wanted to Be God & Other Stories, The Nimrod Flipout, The Girl On The Fridge, and most recently, Suddenly, a Knock on the Door.

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