Jesus' Son: Stories by Denis Johnson

by Denis Johnson
Jesus' Son: Stories by Denis Johnson  
published 1993 by Harper Perennial
first published 1992
binding Paperback
isbn 0060975776   (isbn13: 9780060975777)
pages 176
description The unnamed narrator in Jesus' Son lives through a car wreck and a heroin overdose. Is he blessed? He cheats, lies, steals--but possesses a ch...more
date added
04-10-07



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Daniel
Daniel rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
01/05/08

“Jesus’ Son” by Denis Johnson (1992)


You’ve eaten a bottle of amphetamines.
You’ve also drunk bourbon and smoked hashish in the span of a few hours, and your hitchhiking luck has run out. It’s raining, but you lie down by the exit ramp on the interstate to go to sleep. You see, you don’t care whether you live or die.
This is where Denis Johnson begins his first story in his lyrically depressive collection, Jesus’ Son: his drug-addled narrator rising up from sleeping in a downp...more
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John
John rated it: 1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars
04/23/08

Read in April, 2003
recommends it for: Literary readers who've read all the good books
I wouldn’t dislike this book so much if professors and literati hadn’t rubbed it in my face so much. Don't get me wrong - it wasn't entertaining, enlightening, intellectually arousing, and it didn't harbor any interesting characters or compelling scenes despite dealing with drugs, physical handicaps and multiple deaths. The narrator was far too pretentious with far too little beautiful writing or insight to pull it off. I was mostly bored or depressed, and occasionally outraged and how poorl...more
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Jonathan
Jonathan rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
08/27/07

Read in August, 2007
recommends it for: sigh...
Look, I don't know how else to put this. I recognize what Johnson's accomplished here, I acknowledge that he has a gift for phrase-level shine, and I concede that these semi-linked stories evince a remarkably coherent and vividly-depicted worldview that I might call "hopelessly optimistic," or maybe "tending to carry on when there's clearly no good reason to do so," or else, more succinctly, "Conradian" . . . but, I'm sorry, what I couldn't help but think/feel, wadi...more
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Jessica
Jessica rated it: 1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars
12/05/07

Read in January, 1994
recommends it for: people who like books about people on heroin
I just hate books about people on heroin. People are crazy about this writer, and he's supposed to be super brilliant and all that, but I really wouldn't know, possibly because I am so dull-witted and overly judgmental and prejudiced. I read this a hundred years ago, and all I remember was being bored out of my skull by a bunch of junkie stories. I guess it's probably amazing or whatever if you can get past that, but I didn't even try. I hate this one genre of fiction, especially short fiction, ...more
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Brandon
Brandon rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
12/24/07

For a collection that can probably be read in one sitting, it's effect is arresting. Johnson renders each story with obsessive care, to the extent even that in many places it reads like poetry. Every sensation, every vision is made vivid and immediate without a single unnecessary word.

Ostensibly it's a collection of writings about addiction. The narrative comes from a wildly distorted and confused perception of reality, and consequently most of it seems detached from any specific time or pl...more
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Vera
Vera rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
04/03/08

Read in February, 2008
Jesus' Son is a collection of short stories or anecdotes all told from the first person who is usually high or tripping on something. The stories are bizarre moments in between hallucination and reality, confusion and enlightenment. I had heard great things about Denis Johnson and I have to say I was under whelmed. There were moments of clarity and beauty in each of those stories but those moments were fleeting and were not quite good enough to make up for the mediocrity that was the rest of ...more
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Joseph
Joseph rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
12/21/07

Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: every fucking one
I've had a few people tell me I had to read this book over the years, but I think it was William that said it and it stuck. I've no money right now, so I went to Borders the other day by my Mom's house to look at tattoo magazines and scoff at the poetry in the New Yorker in the cafe section of the store. Having recently looked all over the Bookmans in Flagstaff, AZ for a copy of Jesus' Son, and not having found it, I was more determined than ever to score and read this book. Well, anyway, as I w...more
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Kevin
Kevin rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
11/27/07

Read in November, 2007
I liked Tree of Smoke so I picked up this much-praised collection of short stories. It's a quick read and - unlike Tree of Smoke - it's perfect for reading in 20 minute doses on the train or bus.

Also unlike Tree of Smoke, with its complicated skien of characters, the stories in Jesus' Son revolve around a single narrator and are linked by shared themes of drug and alcohol use/abuse, and Midwestern small-town boredom, longing, and desperation. Don't let that dissuade you, though. Johnson does...more
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Kelsey
Kelsey rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
01/20/08

This is one of those books where strangely, the movie is actually better then the book. Somehow, I think the movie pulled the story together better. The relationship between Fuckhead and Michele drives the movie and that really works whereas in the short stories you sort of jump around between a lot of characters (all the characters are great though, Dundun, Fuckhead, Michele and Georgie especially :)

Best story is Emergency (where a guy with a knife stuck in his eye comes in to a hospital wi...more
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aisha
aisha rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
07/20/07

Read in January, 2003
my college roommate recommended this book to me - it's been one of my favorite books since the second page of this novel (the line "i knew every raindrop by its name" - that's what got me).

it's a short book of the most beautiful, ethereal, surreal writing, and i love every inch of it.

surprisingly, the film of this book is also fantastic. for me, the novel is darker and i got a very different feel from the movie - but i loved them both - they are the same and separate simultane...more
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Jeremy
Jeremy rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
03/14/08

Denis has come a long way since the publishing of this collection of short stories, I've sort of been reading him in reverse order and while I think he's more illuminating these days there is something special about these stories. Maybe its the cohesive gloom that saturates each story and character like the whiskey they drink, or the brevity of the collection. It stops well before you find yourself just overwhelmed by the downtrodden and amorality. His stories even ask you to laugh along as t...more
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Terry
Terry rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
09/08/07

bookshelves: greatshortstories
Read in July, 2006
recommends it for: most people
Denis Johnson was a bad alcoholic, druggie, and petty thief back in the day. These stories are from that time. Nowadays you almost have to state: I don't advocate the lifestyle. But the stories affected me like nothing since 9 Stories by Salinger.

Far from being downbeat or crazy, the stories are luminous, made of fine crystal, with sentences that burn: "Down the hall she came. She didn't know yet that her husband was dead. We knew. That's what gave her such power over us. She was ...more
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Evan
Evan rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
09/22/07

bookshelves: recently_read
Read in September, 2007
a collection of stories that often end too soon. I was actually afraid that the final story would provide no closure to the entire text and was happy to be wrong. But still, there is alot lacking in Johnson's text that is only somewhat justified by his sparse but sometimes poetic style. Ultimately there isn't enough here to recommend the book as a great collection of interrelated stories. and there aren't many stories here that can stand on their own (even Emergency, one of the longest, feels in...more
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Dustin
Dustin rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
01/08/08

Read in January, 2008
recommended to Dustin by: Zulema, Jacob
recommends it for: acid flashbacks
If I had read this book five or six years ago, it would have changed my life. Unfortunately, I didn't, I read it now, and while it probably won't change my life, it has certainly added something to it: something about surreal beauty and tragedy and sublime loneliness. I feel like this is the book every writing workshop student wants to write--you know the one, that modern opus, that distillation of contemporary life into an unrecognizable series of details and actions that rings so true that you...more
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C.
C. rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
12/16/07

Read in December, 2007
Interwoven stories about the life of an addict in the 1970s. The stories follow him through car accidents, overdoses, recovery, and a few states in the western U.S. It's an unreliable, first-person narrator; giving the reader just the right snatches of his life for the book to be a portrait of this man, riding out a low.

The stories meander. A couple of things happen in each one - there are peak moments - but it's hard to say just what most of the specific stories are about. Though good o...more
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Anne
Anne rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
10/01/07

Read in April, 2005
recommends it for: short story lovers
This book was required reading in a creative short fiction class I took in college. Once I began the first assigned story I couldn't put the book down, and finished the slim volume in one evening. The stories in this book are almost brutally real, with departures from reality implicitly excused by the narrator's combinations of mind-altering substances. Although I generally prefer short stories that take place in made-up worlds, the rural drug culture depicted in this book is possibly stranger t...more
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Mike
Mike rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
07/05/07

Read in May, 2000
This book is an absolute favorite. It's great on so many levels. It can be read as individual stories, or as a novella of sorts. It's really funny, damn depressing at times, and always feels very real. But it's a distorted reality, like one big hallucination. I've tried reading other Denis Johnson books, and though the guy has a wonderful way with words (he's a good poet as well), none of them are as good as this one. He really made something great here.

'Down the hall came the wife. Sh...more
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Stacy
Stacy rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/05/08

Read in March, 2008
After finishing Denis Johnson’s intriguing Already Dead last month, I picked up Jesus’ Son, Johnson’s collection of short vignettes about a drug-addled twenty-something. While hailed as Johnson’s most accessible work (probably due to its brevity), I found it quite poetic, despite how sparse each scene was. Reading it was like watching a vintage Gus Van Sant film -- Drugstore Cowboy or My Own Private Idaho -- somber, with the subtext of the inexplicably mystical. One story finds the narra...more
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Lana
Lana rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
08/27/07

Read in August, 2007
recommends it for: Amy Hempel Lovers
Every once in a while I like to pickup a book of short stories the way another person might pick up a box of cookies. You start with every intention of savoring each morsel, spacing them out through the coming week. With Johnson, as with cookies, I spent two night gorging. Though these stories are so light and sparse, gorging is too terrestrial a word. You could take anyone of these stories (connected by a single narrarator POV) and pick it apart line by line and you'd have a pile of poems. Look...more
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AJ
AJ rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
08/22/07

recommends it for: elliott smith
i'm back, fuckers.


I read this on my 22 state excursion. I'm so tired right now that i'm in danger of getting a concussion from my head landing rather suddenly on the counter, so this might be a bit on the lackluster side. But anyway.

I did like this book, really, but I think it came at the wrong time or something. It was well written, I enjoyed it, but at the same time, I feel like i've read it before. Bukowski, Kerouac, Wolfe, etc etc. I feel like the bitter, drug-ridden style of writi...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 4.28 (2291 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 4.29 (2029 ratings)
number of reviews: 298






other editions

Jesus' Son (Paperback)
Jesus' Son: Stories (Hardcover)
Jesus' Son (Mass Market Paperback)









quote

"People entering the bars on First Avenue gave up their bodies. Then only the demons inhabiting us could be seen. Souls who had wronged each other were brought together here. The rapist met his victim, the jilted child discovered its mother. But nothing could be healed, the mirror was a knife dividing everything from itself, tears of false fellowship dripped on the bar. And what are you going to do to me now? With what, exactly, would you expect to frighten me?" more quotes »