DAVE EGGERS is the author of many books, among them The Circle, The Eyes and the Impossible, The Monk of Mokha, A Hologram for the King, What Is the What, and The Museum of Rain. He is the cofounder of 826 Valencia, a youth writing and tutoring center which has inspired dozens of similar nonprofit organizations around the world, and the founder of McSweeney's, an independent publisher. He has been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award, and is the recipient of the Dayton Literary Peace Prize, the Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award for Education, and the American Book Award.
"Eggers is still doing some of his strongest work... the
wildest and funniest satire of our president I’ve read so far, it’s
a great relief to see that Eggers has not lost his edge, in fact
he’s turning himself into one of our great political
novelists."
—KCRW's Best Books of 2019
"This tale entertains.. Inherently hilarious... the writing
works because Eggers doesn’t try to be too sly or cerebral. The
tone is cartoonish and naive and the illustrations by Nathaniel
Russell are childlike, but sinister, reminiscent of a Hilaire
Belloc story... Eggers doesn’t have to exaggerate, he just has
to pick and choose his details. The Captain and the Glory is funny
because it’s true."
—The Times (UK)
"A balm for our time. Eases a bit of the fear. It's brilliant and
iconic and straddles the lines of humor and timelessness and
indispensability. Get it. We need it."
—Lisa Taddeo, author of Three Women
"An act of catharsis — a scream into the void that
concentrates our collective need to do so. In a decade, the novel
might exist, not as an explainer for our times, but more as a
fun-house mirrored snapshot of a period Eggers deems a
'once-in-century' anomaly."
—Medium
"A short parable for our times that is 30 percent Veep, 30
percent Voltaire, and the rest flavored by Margaret Atwood,
Jonathan Swift, Percival Everett, and Salman Rushdie."
—Los Angeles Review of Books
"Funny, incisive allegory."
—Seattle Times
“I’m fascinated by people who are able to do a variety of wildly
different things, all successfully. Dave Eggers is one of those
people.”
—Ezra Klein, Vox
“In Dave Eggers’ witty fable The Captain and the Glory, the
fictional narcissist who takes command of a ship believes ‘all
books are written by people who would not get erections.’”
—The Independent (UK)
"If you’ve felt like you’ve been living in Wonderland since 2016,
Dave Eggers’s latest, The Captain and the Glory, will be welcome
reassurance that you’re not the only one, a hilarious allegory
about an unqualified buffoon made captain of a ship because some
people onboard want to “shake things up.”
—Campus Circle
"Seriously, tell any of the best novelists in America to satirize
an obese septuagenarian who’s addicted to Sudafed and paid more
money than most households bring in in a year to pay off a porn
star with whom he slept while his wife was pregnant about a decade
before he became the most powerful man in the country. They’d
probably avoid the topic because it’s too insane to touch... Dave
Eggers is one of the best novelists in America right now, though,
and he likes to get weird with his stories, so here we are. The
Captain and the Glory handles the absurdity of Trump more deftly
than some other very funny people have... Eggers presents
these events matter-of-factly. He doesn’t normalize them, but
introduces them, already normalized within the world he’s
constructed. It’s an interesting world, but it’s not that different
from ours—a testament to how far we’ve strayed from normalcy."
—BookTrib
“With hilariously identifiable characters, chillingly brazen
criminality, and burgeoning totalitarianism conveyed in a
mesmerizing, fairy-tale cadence, Eggers, in concert with nimble and
expressive illustrator Russell, presents an ingenious, incisive,
grimly entrancing fable reflecting our nation’s ever more alarming
predicament.”
—Booklist
“Utterly hysterical. This book gets it exactly right — the tone,
the form, the kind of naive narrative that implies that all this is
perfectly normal. I laughed out loud so frequently I was amazed,
because I’m not that easy to make laugh out loud. Bravo.”
—Eric Idle
“A funny, macabre, and inspired modern fable about a boat and its
captain. If there is any further metaphor involved, though, it
is totally lost on me.”
—B. J. Novak
“A shattering, hilarious, spellbinding siren call from the
deck of one of our greatest storytellers and prophets.”
—Eve Ensler
"This dark fable is a piercing look at the foibles of our
time."
—Admiral James Stavridis USN, Supreme Allied Commander at NATO
(2009-2013)
“It is difficult these days to portray the sheer, numbing,
terrifying, unprecedented strangeness of what is happening in
contemporary maritime life. One wants to say it mirrors politics?
But truly no metaphor quite captures the sense of peril, nausea,
uncertainty, and constant upheaval we feel on angry seas while
under bad command. The worry is that you stop trying to describe
it. That is why Dave Eggers’s novel is such an accomplishment: it
reminds us of how bad it is right now, how we have a moral
obligation to keep noticing it, and not get quietly used to it. I’m
talking about boat life. Nothing else. Nothing else.”
—John Hodgman
"There is a peculiar kind of cathartic feeling that comes from
desperate, worried laughter. This kept happening to me while
reading this book. The Captain and the Glory is completely absurd
and true. It is as funny as it is scarily reflective of our times
and current president. Eggers has given us an essential American
satire, a depiction of this administration that doesn’t simply deny
it as an abomination—which it is—but carries us through an
illustration of a parallel imaginary world that delights and
defames and is just so good and funny."
—Tommy Orange
If the normal daily diet of news makes you think that Lord Byron
was right -- that you should laugh so you do not weep — then
let Dave Eggers help you do just that.
—George F. Will
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