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No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories

No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories

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Author: Miranda July
Publisher: Scribner
Category: Book

List Price: $14.00
Buy New: $4.11
You Save: $9.89 (71%)



New (57) Used (44) from $3.11

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 48 reviews
Sales Rank: 3248

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 0.6

ISBN: 0743299418
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9780743299411
ASIN: 0743299418

Publication Date: May 6, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories
  • Kindle Edition - No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories
  • Audio Download - No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories (Unabridged)
  • Audio CD - No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories

Similar Items:

  • Learning to Love You More
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  • Me and You and Everyone We Know
  • The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
  • Bed

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Award-winning filmmaker and performing artist Miranda July brings her extraordinary talents to the page in a startling, sexy, and tender collection. In these stories, July gives the most seemingly insignificant moments a sly potency. A benign encounter, a misunderstanding, a shy revelation can reconfigure the world. Her characters engage awkwardly -- they are sometimes too remote, sometimes too intimate. With great compassion and generosity, July reveals their idiosyncrasies and the odd logic and longing that govern their lives. No One Belongs Here More Than You is a stunning debut, the work of a writer with a spectacularly original and compelling voice.


Customer Reviews:   Read 43 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars I'M JEALOUS   November 4, 2008
But instead of hating Miranda July because I am jealous of her, I'm going to love her. Well, not love HER, I don't even know her . . . but love the idea of her. Love the fact that she's alive and she wrote these stories (even though I wish I had written them!) I've loved her before: I bought all the copies of Learning to Love You More in a bookstore and gave them out as presents. But making a book like that isn't something I've ever want to do, so I just loved it without a hint of envy. But this book is fiction, and it's fabulous, and inventive. The characters are so pure and raw they're almost skinless. They do and say and act out on the swirling, mess of lunacy that resides in everyone's mind. I don't want to say too much about each story because the greatness in all these stories is that what the reader knows in the end is so much more illuminated and full than what she knows in the beginning. There are moments in the book where I actually, audibly , gasped. Put my hand to my mouth and gasped. Like at a moment near the end of the story about Prince William. My gasp had nothing to do with His Royal Highness. This book is full of moments like that--they are all magical in a way, everything that great writing is supposed to be.


4 out of 5 stars You belong here, too.   October 13, 2008
Each story is a sensitive portrayal of a lonely life. The narrators all come from the same, alienated place. They are odd, and in their oddness, sympathetic.

Beneath the sad surface, there is a note of optimism in every piece. Some of the characters try to reach out to others and fail, spectacularly so, but at least they try.

Strong pieces include "The Swimming Lesson" and "I Kiss a Door."



5 out of 5 stars like stepping into the head of someone you thought you would never meet but always wanted to   October 11, 2008
I absolutely loved this book! The characters are vivid and real and sad and funny and dirty and depressed and erotic and rotten and beautiful....
I found myself laughing and crying, sometimes while on the same page. I so needed to read a book like this...it tells it like it is, all tangled up and messy. Miranda July has a way of slipping dark secrets into the stories that simply just sit there and stare you in the face. The sometimes disturbing realities of the characters or the purely bizarre human events that occur are maginfied and yet made to seem so normal. I don't think I would want to be a character in one of these stories but I am quite sure that everyone around me is...or vice versa. What a strange and marvelous book!

p.s. I simply can't get the image of the woman in the tattered robe driving past the main character in Majesty screaming for "Potato" with the windows shut. Or, the line "One woman still had the napkin on her head, possibly asleep." in It was Romance. I could go on and on...




1 out of 5 stars HI MIRANDA   October 9, 2008
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

Hi Miranda - I know you are reading this, because you are bored with the 5 star reviews, and are compelled to know what a 1 star reviewer thinks. Too bad - I really give you 6 stars. But I recommend to everyone that they buy the audio CD pack instead of the book, because your voice doubles the pleasure. Thanks for the weirdness, Miranda!


5 out of 5 stars Desperately delightful.   September 25, 2008
July's short fiction is bubbling over with desperate ecstasy - sometimes shocking (and shockingly mundane), each piece taps into the lonely core at the center of each of us. Although the charge that most of her characters are similar is true, this is hardly a negative; it is the product of her touching upon the raw spirit of the human condition. Her voice is simultaneously distinct and familiar - with her short fiction, as with her film and other works, the extraordinary becomes commonplace, and the daily minutiae becomes miraculous.

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