Want Not
<div>A <I>New York Times</I> Notable Book<br><br /> €œA wonderful book, and there€s no one I would not urge to read it . . . This is the work of a fluid, confident and profoundly talented writer who gets more fluid, more confident and seemingly more talented even within the book itself.€ €"Dave Eggers, <I>New York Times Book Review</I><br><br /> A highly inventive and corrosively funny story of our times, Want Not exposes three different worlds in various states of disrepair€"a young freegan couple living off the grid in New York City; a once-prominent linguist, sacked at midlife by the dissolution of his marriage and his father€s losing battle with Alzheimer€s; and a self-made debt-collecting magnate, whose brute talent for squeezing money out of unlikely places has yielded him a royal existence, trophy wife included.<br><br /> Want and desire propel these characters forward toward something, anything, more, until their worlds collide, briefly, randomly, yet irrevocably, in a shattering ending that will haunt readers long after the last page is turned.<br><br /> €œShrewd, funny, and sometimes devastating . . . What <I>Want Not</I> does best, though, isn€t plotting but portraits of humanity: the small epiphanies and private hurts of every person whose life, like the detritus they produce, is as beautifully mundane and unique as a fingerprint.€ €"<I>Entertainment Weekly</I><br><br /> €œAn impassioned work of fiction.€ €"<I>Dallas Morning News</I></div>