Last Night at the Lobster
Perched in the far corner of a run-down New England mall, the Red Lobster hasn't been making its numbers and headquarters has pulled the plug. But manager Manny DeLeon still needs to navigate a tricky last shift. With four shopping days left until Christmas, Manny must convince his near-mutinous staff to hunker down and serve the final onslaught of hungry retirees, lunatic...more
Hardcover, 160 pages
Published
November 1st 2007
by Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
(first published January 1st 2007)
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Absolutely pitch-perfect.
I don't know if everyone can appreciate exactly why this book is so perfect, but what O'Nan has done in capturing the mood of a crew of food service workers just as their workplace is about to shuts its doors forever is remarkable.
In any service environment, a peculiar culture builds up among the employees, but in food service that culture knits itself in a very specific way. It's all about the money: how the servers relate to the kitchen staff, bar staff, and managers...more
I don't know if everyone can appreciate exactly why this book is so perfect, but what O'Nan has done in capturing the mood of a crew of food service workers just as their workplace is about to shuts its doors forever is remarkable.
In any service environment, a peculiar culture builds up among the employees, but in food service that culture knits itself in a very specific way. It's all about the money: how the servers relate to the kitchen staff, bar staff, and managers...more
Reading this book I was reminded of Joe Queenan's Red Lobster, White Trash, and the Blue Lagoon (1999), an unfunny book of tossed-off "humor" pieces about the irrevocable cheesiness of American culture. In an essay called "Slouching toward Red Lobster" (see what I mean by "unfunny"?), Queenan describes the chain as a place for people who think they're too good for Roy Roger's. That about sums up his point: I'm better than other people, and I get to write a book about it!
What I loved about LAST N...more
What I loved about LAST N...more
Feb 19, 2008
Karl Krekeler
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Karl by:
NPR
Wow.
Stewart O'Nan made the most mundane thing (a story about the last day at a Red Lobster) and made it into a beautiful, moving story. In just a short time (less than 150 pages), he painted characters that I hope I can meet again someday to see how their new lives work out.
This was an interesting project. He basically wrote a story backwards. This is a story about an ending, with the hope of a new beginning.
I learned about this book on NPR, and learned about Stewart O'Nan by reading Faithful, a...more
Stewart O'Nan made the most mundane thing (a story about the last day at a Red Lobster) and made it into a beautiful, moving story. In just a short time (less than 150 pages), he painted characters that I hope I can meet again someday to see how their new lives work out.
This was an interesting project. He basically wrote a story backwards. This is a story about an ending, with the hope of a new beginning.
I learned about this book on NPR, and learned about Stewart O'Nan by reading Faithful, a...more
I read this while waiting for mosaic grout to dry, that's how short it was (143 pages). Once I started, I was hooked. It's about the final night of service at a Red Lobster in some cold, crappy part of the country (upstate New York? Boston?). It reminded me of when I worked on a project at TRW that was abruptly cancelled -- shutting down, boxing up, saying goodbye, the feeling of disappointment and frustration with The Powers That Be who make stupid decisions. At least we didn't have to deal wit...more
What a short but outstanding book. If you have ever worked in the corporate restaurant business (I did my time at Chi-Chi's Mexican Restaurant), the atmosphere and people will ring especially true. The story concerns the last day/night of a Red Lobster restaurant. The Darden Corporate office has decided to close this branch and has demoted the loyal, hardworking manager to a position at the Olive Garden. The no-show workers, lifers in the restaurant business, pothead kitchen staff, waitresses sl...more
During a cold winter’s night, where the snow was coming down an inch a minute outside my cottage in Michigan, I opened Stewart O'Nan's novella (146 pages) "Last Night at the Lobster". It was three days before Christmas and I spent the night with a cast of characters that are quite simply drawn from everyday life. "Last Night at the Lobster" is a deeply moving novel about how we work and how we find love. Anyone who has worked in retail or a restaurant will identify. It is also a novel on how we...more
Mar 11, 2008
Matt
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
contemporary-literature
Note: Appeared in the Feb. 28 CVN "On the Bookshelf"
“I love this cover,” said Christie Boyd at the Feb. 20 meeting of the Coastal View Book Club. “It’s so bleak!” The wonderfully illustrative, utterly bleak image on the cover of Stewart O’Nan’s “Last Night at the Lobster,” shows a solitary man trudging through a grayish, snow-swept parking lot for the final time. One can, and does, accurately judge this book by its cover.
Manny DeLeon, the manager of a Red Lobster in New England, is an employee w...more
“I love this cover,” said Christie Boyd at the Feb. 20 meeting of the Coastal View Book Club. “It’s so bleak!” The wonderfully illustrative, utterly bleak image on the cover of Stewart O’Nan’s “Last Night at the Lobster,” shows a solitary man trudging through a grayish, snow-swept parking lot for the final time. One can, and does, accurately judge this book by its cover.
Manny DeLeon, the manager of a Red Lobster in New England, is an employee w...more
Last Night at the Lobster owes what little effectiveness it has more to its three conceits than to skill or insight. First, it's narrated in the present tense, for a sense of immediacy. Second, it's set entirely in environments (a chain restaurant and a shopping mall) that are comforting by design. Third, the story takes place during a snow storm, for a sense of surreality and semi-isolation. O'Nan does little else to generate the mood on which the novel depends; in particular he provides few of...more
So much to admire in this book, but not really enjoyable. O'Nan nails the rhythms and speech of restaurant staff. The Lobster of the book is very real and its staff wholly believable. And yet, the book is a bit of a slog. Maybe if O'Nan had stripped out the run of the mill love affair and focused merely on the work details the book would have been more compelling. The love story is weak as compared to the drama of seating, serving, and satisfying customers which can provide fascinating, anxious...more
May 12, 2010
Kathryn
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fiction,
all-time-favorite
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Last Night at the Lobster by Stewart O’Nan takes us to the Red Lobster restaurant in a far corner of the New Britain, Connecticut shopping mall, four days before Christmas. The corporation, Darden Restaurants, Inc, has decided sales are not sufficient, so they will close the restaurant and demote the manager, Manny DeLeon, to assistant manager of an Olive Garden restaurant in a nearby town. Three months ago, Manny was told to recruit 5 of his 44 employees for jobs at the Olive Garden, and to lay...more
May 12, 2013
Lisa (Harmonybites)
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Lisa (Harmonybites) by:
Gerri Leen
It would be easy to slight this novel--novella really; I read its 146 pages in less than two hours. The style was described as spare in reviews and its emotions are understated and it deals with ordinary people on an ordinary day where nothing extraordinary happens. It's four shopping days before Christmas and a Red Lobster restaurant at a New England mall is closing. At the start of the novel its manager, Manny DeLeon, is opening up for the last shift. Through the day he deals with difficult cu...more
There was something a bit sweet about this book; not where it begins or ends, necessarily, and not the main character, necessarily, who is hardly a Leading Man out of Romantic Fiction (but I liked him). It's a super-short account of the last night of a Red Lobster that is in the process of closing down forever. Manny, our main character, is the manager, and even though his hopes have been disappointed left and right (like the waitress he loves but can't have, like the girlfriend he has but doesn...more
The first book I read by Stewart O'Nan was "The Circus Fire," about the tragic fire at a Ringling Brother big top in Hartford, CT, during the 1940s. I've read a lot of books about fire, an obsession I've been cultivating since I first watched a fire engine roar down the street when I was two years old, and this was a good one. It was propulsive fiction. I read the entire thing flying home from Paris, ignoring the inflight meal (this was back in the days when they had inflight meals; now you just...more
Picked this one up for two reasons:
a.) the cover and size grabbed my attention
b.) it's set around the holidays and I needed a good Christmas book to read.
O'Nan is a really good writer, no doubt about it. He's got a good voice. He's very descriptive and does a great job of putting you in the setting.
This book, however, was greatly disappointing. It had been lauded by folks like the NPR critics, but I'm not sure why. Yes, he painted a stark and realistic portrait of what it's like to work in a res...more
a.) the cover and size grabbed my attention
b.) it's set around the holidays and I needed a good Christmas book to read.
O'Nan is a really good writer, no doubt about it. He's got a good voice. He's very descriptive and does a great job of putting you in the setting.
This book, however, was greatly disappointing. It had been lauded by folks like the NPR critics, but I'm not sure why. Yes, he painted a stark and realistic portrait of what it's like to work in a res...more
i read this book because of two things: one, lee's ecstatic review and two, the first page, which i immediately liked when i scoped it on amazon. love the premise. loved the details, descriptions, setting. and yet i couldn't help feeling like it was a bit too realistic... i know that's weird to say and really it's not quite what i mean, just that despite the great red lobster details and pitch perfect characterizations (the lifer waitress is named roz, for pete's sake) at times it seemed a bit T...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Jan 31, 2008
Liz
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
no church book clubs--too many F-bombs...
Recommended to Liz by:
Jeanette West
I have to put out a disclaimer that the plot is not the best crafted, or that there's even much of any kind of story line. The whole book is centered around one long day reminiscent of Groundhog Day; it feels like that same kind of stuck-in-a-rut hopelessness--you mostly just want it to end (although I think that may be intended). The blue collar-esque manager (Manny) of the Red Lobster is trying to survive the last working day, crappy day, before the struggling branch closes. However, the writi...more
As others have stated, this book is completely on point about the restaurant/store experience. Setting it in a blizzard was a nice touch, it imbues the whole book with a sort of ephemeral beauty that stems from the transformation of these mall parking lots into surreal environments, not that they necessarily needed the help, I guess. herf herf.
Anyway, all of the personal stuff in relation to the restaurant rings true, too. I guess I felt like the whole relationship subplot weakened the book as a...more
Anyway, all of the personal stuff in relation to the restaurant rings true, too. I guess I felt like the whole relationship subplot weakened the book as a...more
An absolute gem of a novella. Last Night at the Lobster is a bittersweet meditation of a book about the nature of endings. While snow blankets the world outside, Manny holds on instinctively to the insular world he's created as general manager of the Red Lobster, even as that world comes to an end and he follows his daily routines for the last time.
It's a quiet story, almost as if the book itself is muffled by the snow softly falling outside the Lobster's windows, but in his tale of one night at...more
It's a quiet story, almost as if the book itself is muffled by the snow softly falling outside the Lobster's windows, but in his tale of one night at...more
In Last Night at the Lobster, O'nan explores the attachments we create to our surroundings, the places we come to call our own, the people we love and think we love. The fullness of these emotions are rendered in the utter realness of the protagonist, Manny, a working class thirty-something whose life is completely entangled with the Red Lobster he has managed for over ten years. During this period Manny has come to believe this particular Red Lobster is his own, even though Red Lobsters are not...more
Why did I like this book so much? It's not that mind-blowing, really. It's the story of the manager and employees of an east coast Red Lobster, who all show up for work on the last day before the parent company shuts that particular branch down. Mostly it's a story about the manager, and his regrets (he's in love with one of the waitresses), and his worries for the future.
It's one of those fine detail, minute-by-minute, day in the life type stories, which I thought I had grown to hate...but may...more
It's one of those fine detail, minute-by-minute, day in the life type stories, which I thought I had grown to hate...but may...more
This is a small novel. It takes place in a single area, over a single day, following the life of a single person. Manny is a manager of a Red Lobster that's closing that day and his life is unglamorous to say nothing. The book lingers on the details and they are fittingly inglorious. His job sucks. He has a pregnant girlfriend that he doesn't like and an exgirlfriend that doesn't want him in a sweet and condescending kind of a way. What is amazing is that O'Nan makes this boring life almost nobl...more
Last Night at the Lobster tells the story of the impending closure of a
Red Lobster on a harsh, snowy night in Massachusetts. Manny DeLeon, the
beleaguered manager, will hereafter be demoted to assistant manager at a
distant Olive Garden. This character may be compared to St. Jude, the
patron saint of lost causes or Charlie Brown, ever hopeful on the
pitcher's mound despite being down by 10 runs. On this last night there is no incentive for Manny or his employees to do anything other than pick up the...more
Red Lobster on a harsh, snowy night in Massachusetts. Manny DeLeon, the
beleaguered manager, will hereafter be demoted to assistant manager at a
distant Olive Garden. This character may be compared to St. Jude, the
patron saint of lost causes or Charlie Brown, ever hopeful on the
pitcher's mound despite being down by 10 runs. On this last night there is no incentive for Manny or his employees to do anything other than pick up the...more
This gem of a read has stuck with me since reading it in December of 2008. A seemingly simple story about a thirty-something manager of a Red Lobster in the Northeastern USA, and his last day on the job, as the restaurant is being permanantly closed a few days before Christmas. The character, Manny, and the dillemas he copes with regarding his employees, a waitress he is in love with, and his pregnant girlfriend waiting for him at home, resonate long after reading the last page. An honest, movin...more
Just said "wow" after finishing the perfect ending. Nothing hokey or overdramatic, feels absolutely real and therefore wholly fictional in the best sense. Perfectly focused in terms of plot, setting, detail, character. After a while, unwritten expository stuff is suggested about caring about work, about patience, diligence, compassion, humility, the comforts of routine. All these themes are also formally reflected in the language and approach. Slow and short and understated and subtly deep and g...more
Mar 13, 2008
jo
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
restaurant managers
i would have given this book one star if i hadn't read it in one long draught. one feels one owes the author something is the author has kept one thus entertained. but this is what i wish: that steward o'nan didn't feel so compelled to write in such a "lyrically" detailed english that you can't go for more than three words without having the rotundity of things stuffed down your throat. also, why no hugs at the end? i mean, seriously.
(sorry, jeff, but clearly we have seen different things in thi...more
(sorry, jeff, but clearly we have seen different things in thi...more
Do you remember those essays you wrote in high school? The ones in which you would have to choose some small moment in time (or inanimate object) and describe it ad nauseum? Welcome to “Last Night at the Lobster”; 146 pages detailing a single day in the life of a man whose only redeeming quality is his love for his recently deceased grandmother (and honestly, I thought he was a maybe a little overly obsessed with her until he noted her recent passing).
Basically, the narrator is a cheating ass of...more
Basically, the narrator is a cheating ass of...more
This is a small book that lingers in your mind like a faint tune that drifts awhile before fading out. The setting is a Red Lobster restaurant perched on the edge of a suburban mall and an interstate and the people who worked there before the anonymous corporate forces decided to close it four days before Christmas. Our hero is the dutiful manager who nearly always tries to do the right thing, but sometimes wishes things were different with his former love, one of the waitresses. He's a common m...more
Although the short (146 pages) book is all only about one day - the last day in business of a Red Lobster restaurant in a mall parking lot in Connecticut, it reels you in, and you can really visualize yourself as working as one of the staff members on that last slow day of business. Slow, because a blizzard has struck CT, and even though there are only 4 days left until Christmas, mall shopping business is dead. As is the adjoining Lobster's business. The book gives you insight into the restaura...more
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Stewart O'Nan is the author of eleven novels, including Snow Angels and A Prayer for the Dying, a story collection, and two works of nonfiction. His previous novel, Last Night at the Lobster, was a national bestseller, was nominated for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and was named one of the New York Public Library Books to Remember. Additionally, Granta named him one of the 20 Best Young Ameri...more
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