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Drinking Coffee Elsewhere
 
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Drinking Coffee Elsewhere (Hardcover)

by Zz Packer (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (45 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

An outstanding debut story collection, Z.Z. Packer's Drinking Coffee Elsewhere has attracted as much book-world buzz as a triple espresso. Yet, surprisingly, there are no gimmicks in these eight stories. Their combination of tenderness, humor, and apt, unexpected detail set them apart. In the title story (published in the New Yorker's summer 2000 Debut Fiction issue), a Yale freshman is sent to a psychotherapist who tries to get her--black, bright, motherless, possibly lesbian--to stop "pretending," when she is sure that "pretending" is what got her this far. "Speaking in Tongues" describes the adventures of an Alabama church girl of 14 who takes a bus to Atlanta to try to find the mother who gave her up. Looking around the Montgomery Greyhound station, she wonders if it has changed much since the Reverend King's days. She "tried to imagine where the 'Colored' and 'Whites Only' signs would have hung, then realized she didn't have to. All five blacks waited in one area, all three whites in another." Packer's prose is wielded like a kitchen knife, so familiar to her hand that she could use it with her eyes shut. This is a debut not to miss. --Regina Marler


From Publishers Weekly

The clear-voiced humanity of Packer's characters, mostly black teenage girls, resonates unforgettably through the eight stories of this accomplished debut collection. Several tales are set in black communities in the South and explore the identity crises of God-fearing, economically disenfranchised teens and young women. In the riveting "Speaking in Tongues," 14-year-old "church girl" Tia runs away from her overly strict aunt in rural Georgia in search of the mother she hasn't seen in years. She makes it to Atlanta, where, in her long ruffled skirt and obvious desperation, she seems an easy target for a smooth-talking pimp. The title story explores a Yale freshman's wrenching alienation as a black student who, in trying to cope with her new, radically unfamiliar surroundings and the death of her mother, isolates herself completely until another misfit, a white student, comes into her orbit. Other stories feature a young man's last-ditch effort to understand his unreliable father on a trip to the Million Man March and a young woman who sets off for Tokyo to make "a pile of money" and finds herself destitute, living in a house full of other unemployed gaijin. These stories never end neatly or easily. Packer knows how to keep the tone provocative and tense at the close of each tale, doing justice to the complexity and dignity of the characters and their difficult choices.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

45 Reviews
5 star:
 (28)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (45 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Yeah, in my home . . ., Jun 22 2006
By C.W. (White Horse) - See all my reviews
I bought this book when I went to hear ZZ Packer speak at a writing convention. Until then, I hadn't heard of her, but her speech, which was titled something like, "How writing can make a difference," really enticed me to buy it. Make no mistake, Packer's fiction is vivid and enervating. Rather than being formulaic or banal, her stories draw compelling pictures of her characters' lives. From Dina starving in Japan in "Geese" to holly-roller Doris who confronts endemic racism in "Doris is Coming" to a misanthrope Dina who can't abandon her hardened shell in "Drinking Coffee Elsewhere," Packer has abundant understanding and compassion toward her characters. These stories are beautiful works of art, and open-ended enough that one feels as though these are living, breathing people who will continue living and breathing. Unlike so many authors, Packer allows us joint-custody for these characters' futures, which only makes them more honest and convincing.

[...]
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5.0 out of 5 stars Exciting stories, Mar 9 2006
By Mikhail "mike" (Raleigh, NC USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
DRINKING COFFEE ELSEWHERE is one of my personal favorites. ItS exploration of the characters, fascinating plots and smooth flow make for an excellent read.and message, which is why I recommend it to any lover of nice stories.With other collections like USUPER AND OTHER STORIES, RUNAWAY, WARD NUMBER SIX AND OTHER RORIES,UNION MOUJIK, I am in the phase of my life where I am enjoying short fiction the most.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Smart People Surrounded by Fools=Great Stories, Jul 18 2004
By M. JEFFREY MCMAHON "herculodge" (Torrance, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
ZZ Packer's masterful stories deal with the crisis of belonging that many African-Americans face because, as individuals, people of all races, including their own, have monolithic expectations of them, which their individuality defies. Packer's characters break out of any kind of preconceived molds and faced with Groupthink, pressures to conform, and the patronization and condescension of liberal whites, these characters become infuriated by the stupidity that surrounds them. The style of the stories is intensely realistic, often satirical, bitter, nihilistic. At the same time Packer brings a deep humanity, complexity, and sympathy to her cast of misfits, all who search for belonging and never find it.

In "Brownies" African-American girls stir a brouhaha with a dubious charge of having heard a racial epithet uttered by the white Brownies. The story in many ways is a funny and disturbing exploration of Groupthink whereby the black Brownies never really heard the epithet but get caught up in the self-righteousness and mission of their revenge. In "Every Tongue Shall Confess" a cross-eyed, homely lady, Clareese, plays by the rules, reads her Bible, and works hard as a nurse, only to be exploited by her church deacons who use her as a door mat. We cringe as we watch Clareese sink deeper and deeper into loneliness. In "Our Lady of Peace" a young woman takes on teaching in a public school in order to change nihilistic, lawless high school children, but in a reversal, the children make her a nihilistic misanthropist. The teacher Lynnea Davis not only begins to despise the children, but the teachers she works with. In the "Ant of the Self" a precocious teenage boy named Spurgeon must face the dilemmas of having an alcoholic bully of a father who drags his son to the Million-Man March where Spurgeon, the innocent party, is berated by rhetorically-inflamed black men to respect and love and appreciate his father for taking him to such a great event when in fact his hustler of a father simply took him to the march in order to sell a bunch of stolen exotic birds. In "Speaking in Tongues" a young girl runs away from home where her overly pious aunt subjects her to the abuses of a dysfunctional, abusive church. However, running away to Atlanta to find her mother, the young girl discovers that the secular world-full of pimps, hustlers, and libertines-offers no refuge.

For all the diversity of these stories, we can see Packer's general themes-her animosity against Groupthink, her loathing of convenient stereotypical thinking, her objection to the use of religion and false piety in order to bully others, her disdain for the manner in which clichés offer people false solutions and self-aggrandizement. Packer is a major writer tackling major themes and I am eagerly awaiting her next publication.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely perfect
there's nothing to not love in this collection from packer, not a sentence to stumble over, not a story to discount. absolutely brillant.
Published on Jul 13 2004 by Jodi Chromey

5.0 out of 5 stars Very good summer read
Drinking Coffee Elsewhere is a collection of short stories about the transition of the human spirit and how the single choices that one makes can effect one's perception of the... Read more
Published on Jul 10 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars Well Written - Too Heavy
I think that ZZ Packer is a wonderful writer. She gives vivid detail and writes clearly. Unfortunately, I didn't find the stories very consistent. Read more
Published on Jun 24 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars Love the writing, not the stories
ZZ Packer is a wonderful writer. Her style and prose are effortless. She allows you to use all of your senses - you can see the characters, feel the weather, and smell the food... Read more
Published on Jun 22 2004

4.0 out of 5 stars Speaking in Tongues
I've heard a lot of mixed reviews about this book, but I bought it anyway. I enjoyed all of the stories besides the last two (absolutely boring). Read more
Published on Jun 10 2004 by Shamontiel L. Vaughn

4.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing and thought provoking collection
In Drinking Coffee Elsewhere ZZ Packer provides a varied, intriguing and thought provoking collection of stories. Read more
Published on May 20 2004 by David J. Gannon

3.0 out of 5 stars wasn't impressed
Obviously, I'm in the minority with the reviewers here. A couple of the stories were impressive - the first in particular. Read more
Published on May 6 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Personal and yet universal stories from a fresh perspective
This debut collection of eight short stories brings a fresh voice to modern fiction. The author, a young African American woman, tells some tales that seem deeply personal and... Read more
Published on April 16 2004 by Linda Linguvic

4.0 out of 5 stars a fresh and exciting voice in comtemporary black fiction
The stories in ZZ Packer's Drinking Coffee Elsewhere brims with rich, wonderful prose and incredibly interesting characters. Read more
Published on April 1 2004 by bowery boy

5.0 out of 5 stars Thank you Z.Z!
Having been so disappointed recently with the many books I've purchased on Amazon, it was with great relief that I finally discovered three that did not disappoint: "Getting... Read more
Published on Mar 20 2004

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