Drinking Coffee Elsewhere

Drinking Coffee Elsewhere

3.74 of 5 stars 3.74  ·  rating details  ·  2,525 ratings  ·  286 reviews
With stories in The New Yorker's debut fiction issue and in The Best American Short Stories, 2000, and as the winner of a Whiting Writers' Award and a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award, ZZ Packer has already achieved what most writers only dream about-all prior to publication of her first book.

Now, in Drinking Coffee Elsewhere, her impressive range and talent are abun...more
Hardcover, 238 pages
Published March 10th 2003 by Riverhead Hardcover (first published February 10th 2003)
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Kirk
It's almost a chore to get past the praise excerpted in the first few pages of this debut story collection from 2003. Much better to simply turn to the stories themselves and make your own judgments. These are certainly accomplished short fictions, literary in the sense that their plots are asymmetical in interesting ways, many ending with codas that introduce ambiguity instead of wrapping up the drama. The subject is the African-American experience, of course, of all varieties: children, teenag...more
Nathan
Jun 08, 2008 Nathan rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Nathan by: my wife
After finishing up a string of dark and heady reads, I picked this up for some light summer reading, on my wife's recommendation. We had originally picked it to read together before bed. The conversation as best I remember went something like:

Me: Oh man, that Gary Soto book of short stories for children was really funny. that's perfect reading for right before bed.
Wife: (Already scanning the bookshelves in our bedroom) Oh yeah, we should pick out something else like that. Is this David Sedaris...more
Erinina Marie
May 31, 2007 Erinina Marie rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: teens
Drinking Coffee Elsewhere by Z.Z. Packer

This novel at first had me seriously questioning the validity of ever reading another today show recommended novel again. However, the second half of this book by amateur, yet elitist rich and well-educated Z.Z. Packer does in fact have some merit. While I question her actual ability to tell the harsh life stories that she would like to embody and while her childishness does at times shine through, she manages to tell an interesting and seductive tale in t...more
oriana
Ooh boy I am terribly behind on writing reviews. Um, what did I think of this? Well, it's a great example of why I hate short stories – when they're bad I wonder why I bothered, and when they're good I can't understand why the author only gave me such a tiny tease. The title story is the best, and "Our Lady of Peace" is great too... so why, ZZ, why? Either of those could have been novels, I'd have kept reading for lots more pages!

A couple of other thoughts:
1. By chance I got an Australian edit...more
Elise
Ugh. I spent the entire last part of this book debating in my head whether I was going to be generous and give it three stars, or be honest and stick it with two. I chose honesty.

This collection is not without its strengths: some careful writing, some witty characters. I downright enjoyed the one about the lesbians at college.

But I can't handle all the stupid main characters! Call me an idealist, but I can't imagine that even a sheltered Pentacostal Georgia girl would run off to Atlanta and, wi...more
Atena Oyadi
I started this about 3 years ago - it's quite good, but sad - dark. A little depressing. It was hard to be in the right mood to pick it up again, even though I wanted to.

This author has a talent for articulating disappointment, awkwardness and a whole range of outsider feelings. Her voice is distinctive somehow, and her main characters are distinct from one another. She has a knack for discomfort, describing embarrassing situations with such emotional precision that you wince and cringe and loo...more
Dave
I spent a couple days debating whether to go with 3 or 4 stars, and though the former won out this book still has significant merit, especially for a debut book of stories. Overhyped? Absolutely. Yet when Packer tells a tale, rather than beating us over the head with the reminder that racism is indeed bad (thanks, hadn't heard), her talent comes through. "Our Lady of Peace" covers a rag tag group of new Baltimore public school teachers and Packer hits the grind of being a teacher square (I speak...more
Diane
Feb 10, 2012 Diane rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: book groups
Recommended to Diane by: Today Show Book Club
Drinking Coffee Elsewhere is a collection of short stories by ZZ Packer. I've had this book on my shelves for years and just now got around to reading it. All the stories on the surface appear to be focused on the African-American experience and many touch on religious issues. However, "Drinking Coffee Elsewhere" is clearly a work of literary fiction with storylines that do not play out in neat arcs but jut back and forth at sharp angles. Likewise the surface reading of the stories is not where...more
Julio Rivera
ZZ Packer’s compilation of short stories touch on a variety of topics, of the many, one of the most obvious themes is that of race, and the relationships between different races. However, Packer’s writing does not just touch on race relations on just a superficial level, Packer is able to infuse her writing with different facets of this issue, which cut deeper than just a white versus black idea, but down to a level that reveals just how blinded people can become when they place race on the fore...more
Kathleen Turnbull
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Patrick Faller
In Ann Charters's anthology, "The Story and Its Writer," in which I first read Packer's gem of a story, "Drinking Coffee Elsewhere" Charters quotes from an interview in which Packer says she compiled this, her first collection, by picking several of the more polished stories out of the Documents file on her computer and assembling them here. This feels true, as the collection certainly reads unevenly, despite the great deal of editing and unifying that went on before the book's first printing. A...more
Leah
Drinking Coffee Elsewhere
ZZ Packer
The Berkley Publishing Group, Copyright 2003

If you think you want to read this book because you like coffee and travel, you probably shouldn’t read Drinking Coffee Elsewhere. If you aren’t quite sure about who you are, where you’re going, or what you’re doing with your life, then this may be the book for you. Drinking Coffee Elsewhere is a collection of short stories that focus on protagonists that feel uncomfortable or unfulfilled leading the lives they have.

A...more
Jeffrey Moll
Upon picking up Drinking Coffee Elsewhere I quickly glanced over a few chapters and soon realized the gem in my hands. The dialog was the first thing that made me fall for this book while the realism behind ZZ Packer’s characterization was the second. A compiling of eight short stories this book takes on the African-American experience through the use of compelling protagonists that must keep taking on more challenges. In the title story, Dina the main character copes with her challenges by drin...more
Rebecca
Inconsistent.

This is one of those cases where the first story in the collection is so awesome, so perfect, so natural and funny and wise and honest that it's impossible not to expect some of that in the rest of the stories. "Brownies" is really fantastic, and should be (and will be) anthologized everywhere. There's a twist at the end that was, for me, entirely unforeseeable. This story deserves the rave reviews that the collection received. (Most of which are printed on the first 7 pages of the...more
olaszka
z.z. packer is a natural writer and that's what makes this collection of short stories a true gem.
i first picked up this book right after i bought it for a song in a london charity shop. later on i was asked (to my great surprise) to read parts of it for one of my uni courses. now i've finally finished it. this makes reviewing it quite tricky so instead i'm just going to share some generals observations:

z.z. packer is a natural writer which means she's got a gift for capturing human quirks in a...more
Elizabeth Yon
I read this book of stories in one day, it is so engaging. Each story is a perfect jewel, prised from the glittering mayhem of life, held up to the light of unsentimental regard, each facet clearly shown. The characters are absolutely true to life, their situations real and immediate in a way that makes me feel that Packer lived these things and these people - if not personally, then through people she knows well. Dialogue flows believably into the reader's "ear", turns of phrase are peppery and...more
Michelle Jones
This collection of short stories had been on my “to read” list for so long that perhaps there was no way for me to not be disappointed by it. I had to force myself to push through and finish this book and when I did I walked away quite unsatisfied.

The more I thought about my disappointment though the more I realized it wasn’t disappointment at all. It was instead discomfort. The book didn’t offer any element of escapism at all. Even though I had next to nothing in common with the actual characte...more
kathryn
Well, I was really into it at first and then there were a bunch of "factual inconsistencies" like the person would leave something one place and then take out the item and use it on the next page-those inconsistencies don't really destroy the intent or feeling of the story, but make it hard for me to read. I think overall that I liked the first half of the stories a good bit more than the second half of stories-they seemed to sort of dwindle-maybe it is just me.
Frederick Bingham
This is a book of short stories, all of whose main characters are African-American women.One of the most memorable, "speaking in Tongues" is about a young teenage girl named Tia. She is living with a strict religious aunt in Alabama. One day she gets sick of it and decides to take a bus to Atlanta to find her mother, who has apparently gone wayward and lives doing unknown sinful things. She meets with a guy named Dezi who is a pimp and drug dealer. Dezi tries to sleep with her, but she resists....more
Mr. Woodnal
This collection of short stories mostly center around coming of age pieces in which African-American adolescent protagonists face important elements of self-discovery, although a few also focus on adults and their own struggles with identity. The first story entitled "Brownies" begins with the one of the most fantastic opening lines I've ever read: "By our second day at Camp Crescendo, the girls in my Brownie troop had decided to kick the asses of each and every girl in Brownie Troop 909." The s...more
L
I'd heard amazing things about this writer from various sources. Packer has been compared to Zadie Smith, Flannery O'Connor, Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison, and Terry McMillan. Believe the hype; the author has earned it. The prose stunned me from the first story and just didn't stop, effortlessly pushing stories along to satisfying and thought-provoking conclusions. As an added bonus, I was able to physically picture the streets in some of the stories, being familiar with the areas about which she...more
Nicholas Armstrong
I'm not sure where to start with this, as I'm not sure which bothered me more or what takes precedent with a short story. Is the telling of the story more important than the voice? Is there something more important than both? What if both aren't quite up-to-snuff? That is kind of the case here and I'm a little put-off by it.

I'll start with the voice, because it was the first thing that bothered me and it consistently bothered me. Don't get me wrong, there are good stories within, or, at least de...more
Elizabeth
When I began reading Drinking Coffee Elsewhere by ZZ Packer, I was taken aback by the power of a good story; the kind of story that gives me a peek into a life I don’t know anything about, the kind of story that surprises me or that makes me stop a moment to contemplate what I’ve just read. Those are the kinds of stories that Packer has written for her first and only short story collection. She was first published in Seventeen magazine at the very young age of 19. She grew up in Atlanta, GA and...more
Chris
An interesting companion to Jennifer Egan's Emerald City which I just finished. In that collection--so often lauded as "promising"--I was looking back to the early career of a now holy-wow author. Here, I imagine I'm on the front end of something much the same. Packer's got chops and will "surely do great things" as some reviewer has certainly said, but most of stories fall just short: too long ("Speaking in Tongues"), too predictable ("Our Lady of Peace"), too dull ("Geese"), etc. The stories t...more
Emily
Mar 11, 2011 Emily rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Anyone who writes, anyone who reads
Recommended to Emily by: Michael
There are two things that I hate about my writing: the fact that it’s predictable and the fact that nothing happens.

On the other hand, what makes ZZ Packer such a spectacular writer is that her stories do the exact opposite of what mine do: they create original situations and characters that could only exist in her stories, and they move. The action moves, yes, but more importantly it moves you.

So many of the stories in Drinking Coffee Elsewhere feel familiar at first. They contain people and wo...more
Nita
Feb 17, 2011 Nita rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Nita by: My brother
I have many books in my house that I have not read, so I decided to look through them and pick one. My brother had to read this book for school and he really enjoyed it. Like one of the other books I have read, Interpreter of Maladies, this book contains many short stories. I like that because you can not get bored of the book if you're reading many different stories. The story I enjoyed most was, The Ant of the Self. It was about a boy having to take his father everywhere and he was missing a b...more
Phil
I saw the title of this book out of the corner of my eye as I rushed past out of the library. "Drinking Coffee Elsewhere" was enough to get me to stop my fast walk and return to actually take the book off of the shelf. I then scanned the information on the inside of the jacket. The book is hailed as the long-awaited debut of the ZZ Packer. She is said to "dazzle with her command of language, surprising and delighting [the reader] with unexpected turns and indelible images" contained within the s...more
Michael
Really, really extraordinarily excellent. The stories here that are the best—most of which have been anthologized in yearly best-of annuals—are the sorts readers come back to again and again, and for good reason: She writes about race in a kind of post-Baldwin manner. Yes, it is an issue for someone growing up black, but often, it more troublesome still for a young life are a lack of money and options, a nasty upbringing, the crazy prejudices about everyone else that we each of us carry buried i...more
Malbadeen
Feb 22, 2010 Malbadeen rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: short story lovers
I have to admit I bought this book based on a shallow premise. I saw the cover at a thrift store and I adored it, I read the first lines of most of the stories (which are awesome!) and decided to spend the whopping 2.00 on it.
But then it sat on my shelf for waaaay too long. Once I started it, I was in love! I thought about quoting some/all of the first lines for you here but I'd rather you get the book and have that experiences with the tangible turn of the pages (mmmmm, can you feel it?).
The t...more
Sharline
Stories that come to life. At times too wordy for my taste but I definitely got hooked, story after story, couldn't put it down.

Overall, beautiful stories, at times funny, at times sad, stories, and especially characters, that come to life. Great dialogue. Anyone else read this? Thoughts?

I think my favorite in the collection is Drinking Coffee Elsewhere. It really moved me, broke my heart slowly and soundly.

What I appreciate is how she turns the end of her stories toward the unexpected and isn...more
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Is Brownies one of your favorite short stories? 2 12 Jan 17, 2013 04:04pm  
Drinking Coffee Elsewhere (Paperback)
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ZZ Packer (born January 12, 1973) is an African-American author, notable for her works of short fiction. Born in Chicago, Illinois, she grew up in Atlanta, Georgia and Louisville, Kentucky. Her given name is Zuwena (Swahili for "good"), but "After a while of teachers mispronouncing my name and everyone else in the world, I began introducing myself as ZZ, and it just kind of stuck" Recognized as a...more
More about Z.Z. Packer...
New Stories from the South 2008  The Best American Short Stories 2000 La Vie Ailleurs: Nouvelles The New Granta Book of the American Short Story

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“She did not want to say it, because it made no practical sense, but in the end she went to Japan for the delicate sake cups, resting in her hand like a blossom; she went to Japan for loveliness.” 6 people liked it
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