Self-help
by Lorrie Moore
|
|
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of Self-help.
discuss this book
friend reviews (0)
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
lists with this book
Where's the love? Add this book to your favorite list.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1238)
bookshelves:
bookblog
Years ago I read Lorrie Moore's excellent Who Will Run the Frog Hospital for a grad school class (on memoirs?) and I have been a fan ever since. Every so often I will run across one of her essays or stories and find myself in stitches, although her humor almost always comes with a healthy dose of irony or solemnity to keep it from being a pure laugh fest. This semester I began my Creative Writing course with an out loud, round-the-class, reading of an essay (which turns out to be from Self-Help...more
Years ago I read Lorrie Moore's excellent Who Will Run the Frog Hospital for a grad school class (on memoirs?) and I have been a fan ever since. Every so often I will run across one of her essays or stories and find myself in stitches, although her humor almost always comes with a healthy dose of irony or solemnity to keep it from being a pure laugh fest. This semester I began my Creative Writing course with an out loud, round-the-class, reading of an essay (which turns out to be from Self-Help...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in December, 2007
Haven fallen in love with Anagrams, I was quite eager to read this Self-Help. Many consider it to be Moore's best work - it's certainly her best-known - so I had pretty high expectations. Unfortunately, I was a little disappointed - I found it neither as consistent nor as affecting as Anagrams.
The book is at it's best when it stuck close to what made Anagrams so fantastic - stories of people who find themselves stuck in lives very different from what they had orig...more
The book is at it's best when it stuck close to what made Anagrams so fantastic - stories of people who find themselves stuck in lives very different from what they had orig...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
2008-read
Read in January, 2008
You pick up Lorrie Moore’s collection of short stories called Self-Help because you’ve always admired her writing. Plus, your own writing is often compared to hers. Not because you are a master of the form, like Moore, but more because your short stories are peppered with a sort of sad and self-deprecating humor.
What you love about reading short story collections over short story anthologies is that you can pick up the threads that move throughout the stories. Moore has a thing for opera...more
What you love about reading short story collections over short story anthologies is that you can pick up the threads that move throughout the stories. Moore has a thing for opera...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction
Read in October, 2005
I found "Self-Help" to be an uneven collection, but the badn outweighed the good. I suggest sticking with the standout pieces and skipping the rest. The opening piece, "How to Be an Other Woman" is an exceptional short story. Moore is great at finding the perfect turn of phrase. Her humor is often sardonic but never completely cold. Her writing style is cool, detached - but there's enough warmth to strike a balance. The next story, "What Is Seized" has a very underg...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2006
recommends it for:
everyone
Moore's first collection of stories introduced her as a writer capable of both heartbreaking sadness and quick wit. Rarely do these two qualities mesh so well in such a difficult medium, but Moore takes on the challenge with the sophistication of a writer much older than 26 (her age when it was published).
The six stories written in the second person imperative create a more serious tone than expected. Somehow the tasks of being a writer and being an other woman seem similar. Moore explain...more
The six stories written in the second person imperative create a more serious tone than expected. Somehow the tasks of being a writer and being an other woman seem similar. Moore explain...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
my-collection
Read in December, 2007
Self-Help is a collection of short stories. Moore's writing is very witty and bitter, a combination that I really enjoy. The book explores several lives: a cancer patient who has decided on suicide as an aesthetic choice, a woman who is learning how to be the other woman, notes on how to be a writer, and a woman who is ravenous for puns, stealing, and food finds herself in a situation that is driving her deeper into her obsessions. There are nine stories in all, each one interesting and funny in...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in May, 2008
I've been reading through this collection again with my 318 class, and, I have to say, I don't like it as much as I remember. There some incredible pieces and some incredible lines, but I can't help feeling that it's getting repetitive. It does provide for great class discussion, though, so it's serving it's purpose.
ADDED:
My students liked the collection, overall, though many, like me, felt a little overwhelmed by Moore by the end. It's a lot. I admire Lorrie Moore and many of my stu...more
ADDED:
My students liked the collection, overall, though many, like me, felt a little overwhelmed by Moore by the end. It's a lot. I admire Lorrie Moore and many of my stu...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 1998
recommended to Kattie by:
Lorrie Moore (went to a reading for school)recommends it for: Lovers of short stories and well-chosen words
I absolutely love this book. Its one of my all time favorites. Lorrie Moore is a master of words and controls them with a flow like music. This collection of short stories was apparently her master's thesis, and the beginning of her high praise for literature.
I read in an interview once that Reese Witherspoon is a big fan of reading, and this is her favorite as well. Makes me believe she has good taste. Sample some of Moore's impeccible form and you will be amazed and one happy reader. ...more
I read in an interview once that Reese Witherspoon is a big fan of reading, and this is her favorite as well. Makes me believe she has good taste. Sample some of Moore's impeccible form and you will be amazed and one happy reader. ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
short-stories,
top-shelf,
writing-related
lorrie moore said once that she is constantly blamed in writing classes for students '2nd person' story phases, most of which are terrible and cause massive headaches to the writing teacher community. i'm proud to say that my 2nd person phase happened way way before i read either moore or rebecca brown, both of whom, i think, write some amazing 2nd person stories (and i also think mine are pretty good sometimes). but yeah, i love these stories, individually and as a whole. and the 'how to be...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
read-2008
Read in June, 2008
This, Lorrie Moore's first collection of short stories, while not as broad and majestic as her endlessly wonderful Birds of America, is hilarious, heartbreaking and bitter, all of Moore's best qualities. Moore has an insight that is unrivaled ("When you were six you thought mistress meant to put your shoes on the wrong feet. Now you are older and know it can mean many things, but essentially it means to put your shoes on the wrong feet." -from "How to be an Other Woman"...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2008
Self Help was a book recomended by my english teacher Mr. Nourok, he had read a passage out in class, and asked teh class if anyone wanted to read the book that they may and see hi mafetr class. I was grasped by the books authentic attention to the details in every short story. As well all the short stories in the book do not connect at all with each other, different characters, different conflict, different time, palce, and setting, yet you feel as if they were a whole. I recomend this book to ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2008
This isn't a book I probably would have picked up if one of Nick's friends (who'd read it for a lit class) hadn't loaned it to me.
Normally, I'm not a big fan of short stories, but I really enjoyed Moore's in this collection. She has a style of writing that is unique and there were lines that really stuck with me. Some of the stories I liked more than others (How to Be an Other Woman one of them).
There is a definite theme to the collection: Of loss, relationship heartache, parental heart...more
Normally, I'm not a big fan of short stories, but I really enjoyed Moore's in this collection. She has a style of writing that is unique and there were lines that really stuck with me. Some of the stories I liked more than others (How to Be an Other Woman one of them).
There is a definite theme to the collection: Of loss, relationship heartache, parental heart...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for:
Will, Amy
Lorrie Moore is one of my new favorite authors. I'm just sad it took me so long to hear about her. Her work reminds me of Jincy Willett, whom I also adore. Insightful, deadpan hilarious, and touching. This collection was written in the 80's, and the time period definitely comes through, but doesn't detract from the message or date the stories at all. In other words, these pieces stand the test of time well. Moore is also one of the only authors I've ever found to use the second person successful...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in October, 2003
recommended to Christin by:
Karl and Suerecommends it for: Sarah, Jenny, and Danielle
As a result of the sheer force and poignancy of Moore's prose, the inimitable quirks and striking turns of phrase, every so often when graduate school is devouring my soul, I imagine running away to Wisconsin to pick her brain and get my MFA, which is even more impractical than my current life plan. This collection, start to finish, is perfect. There's a story for everyone. My personal favorite is "Amahl and the Night Visiors: A Guide to the Tenor of Love" with a close second to &quo...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2008
i really liked this book at first. the stories were interesting and intriguing. but then they started to get somewhat monotonous, all reading like how-to manuals (how to be an other woman, how to talk to your mother, etc.). I realize that this book is called "self-help" and apparently that is what these stories hope to have you do. BUT the repetitive story structures and procedural writing style got old quickly. i liked lorrie moore's writing and am interested in checking out some of h...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
recommended to Helen by:
I bought it at Jonathan Benton Booksellers!
I liked "How" and "How to be a writer" and the one where the woman stole money from Hats and Scarves and stabbed her husband. I love how Lorrie Moore takes parts of words and makes them into jokes or makes them mean something different from what they usually mean and it makes you understand something.
"In the elevator I touch my face, touch my eyes to see if they are behaving, if they are being, if they are having or misbehaving, miss being had. The words conflate an...more
"In the elevator I touch my face, touch my eyes to see if they are behaving, if they are being, if they are having or misbehaving, miss being had. The words conflate an...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
I don't know what happened to my copy. I've lent it to so many people as my favorite book ever. A collection of short stories, mostly told in the 2nd person (which my 9th grade english teacher said did not exist: cannot believe they let her teach, at a decent school no less). So many emotions told in such short stories, so few words. She lets you get in her characters' heads, maybe it's the voice. Not a fan of her other books. Sigh... my copy was loved. worn all around. dog-eared. I hope ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
short-fiction
Read in June, 2008
Moore is kinda metaphor-happy, and the last story "To Fill" is heavy handed (pun, sorry). Otherwise, creative, funny, and often lyrical.
Stories I liked most:
"What Is Seized"
Good use of: filial favoritism, talented people deflecting and warping the goodness of others
"Amahl and the Night Visitors"
Good use of: don't assume you're being wronged, that your life is tragic, to escape a bored life of cat-loving
"How to Talk to Your Mother"
Goo...more
Stories I liked most:
"What Is Seized"
Good use of: filial favoritism, talented people deflecting and warping the goodness of others
"Amahl and the Night Visitors"
Good use of: don't assume you're being wronged, that your life is tragic, to escape a bored life of cat-loving
"How to Talk to Your Mother"
Goo...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in April, 2008
I was all over the place with this one. I loved Birds of America, Like Life, and Who Will Run the Frog Hospital but this one I wasn't as enthusiastic about.
I don't think that I like the stories that are told in second person. Even those are really well-written and powerful, but I get tired of the stilted use of "you."
Overall, some of the stories I was lukewarm about but the ones I liked, I really, really liked. There were just fewer of those, for me, in this collection.
I don't think that I like the stories that are told in second person. Even those are really well-written and powerful, but I get tired of the stilted use of "you."
Overall, some of the stories I was lukewarm about but the ones I liked, I really, really liked. There were just fewer of those, for me, in this collection.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Has a copy to sell/swap
—
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
you.
probably the most conceptually cohesive collection i've ever read and i freaking love that about it. mostly stories are written in an instructional second person (hence, the name). only lacks that fifth star for me because a few of the stories were a break from this style and i really would have liked to see it carried throughout.
she's a fave, fo sho.
also, i found this in a thrift store for 50 cents on the "self-help" shelf, which is pretty entertaining.
she's a fave, fo sho.
also, i found this in a thrift store for 50 cents on the "self-help" shelf, which is pretty entertaining.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
book data (includes all editions)
avg rating (all editions): 4.24 (968 ratings) avg rating (this edition): 4.35 (37 ratings) number of reviews: 115popular shelves
other editions
quote
"Aging flowers, daisies when they die look like hopeful hags, their sunny, hatless faces, their shriveled, limp hair. Tulips wither into birdcages, six black stamens inside, each dried to a dim chirp."
more quotes »






















