David Ellis Dickerson
Forfatter af House of Cards: Love, Faith, and Other Social Expressions
Om forfatteren
Image credit: David Ellis Dickerson [credit: Photo by Halley Wolowiec; obtained from Amazon.com]
Værker af David Ellis Dickerson
House of Cards: The True Story of How a 26-Year-Old Fundamentalist Virgin Learned about Life, Love, and Sex by Writing… (2010) 18 eksemplarer
Postcretaceous Era 1 eksemplar
Associated Works
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Eighteenth Annual Collection (2005) — Bidragyder — 223 eksemplarer
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Almen Viden
- Kanonisk navn
- Dickerson, David Ellis
- Andre navne
- Dickerson, D. Ellis
Chance, Dixon - Køn
- male
- Nationalitet
- USA
- Bopæl
- New York, New York, USA
Tucson, Arizona, USA - Uddannelse
- University of Arizona (MFA|Creative Writing)
Florida State University (PhD|American Literature) - Erhverv
- journalist
author
humorist
Medlemmer
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Associated Authors
Statistikker
- Værker
- 3
- Also by
- 1
- Medlemmer
- 55
- Popularitet
- #295,340
- Vurdering
- 3.8
- Anmeldelser
- 5
- ISBN
- 3
I feel like I should have enjoyed this book more than I should have. By all things considered, I should have -- in a book blurb, [a:David Ellis Dickerson|3255461|David Ellis Dickerson|http://www.goodreads.com/images/nophoto/nophoto-U-50x66.jpg] was favorably compared to [a:David Sedaris|2849|David Sedaris|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1213737698p2/2849.jpg] (a beloved favorite of mine); he grew up a fundamentalist Christian and became disillusioned; and he enjoys the language with which he writes so much that it borders on the fringe of ultimate nerdiness. All of these I could respect and relate to in the same book.
However, Dickerson is no Sedaris, although I must give credit where it's due: I did find House of Cards a thoroughly entertaining read, and there were many a parts in which I found myself guffawing (most notably, with the jokes that language nerds fully appreciate and will never find tiresome).
House of Cards is a beautifully-written memoir, but like I said, I didn't like it as much as I should have, as much as I expected. Even now the only memorable sections were during the break-up with Jane and the instances of backstabbing, passive-aggressiveness by what seems the entirety of the company. Perhaps they were the only parts in which I felt connected to the author's experiences; perhaps I'm merely at a loss to identify with the social ostracization due to an intelligence no one around you understands -- but that's a personal disconnect. Dickerson is in a league (nearly) all his own in intelligence, and that I can, at least, certainly admire.
Overall, House of Cards was a diverting read, as well as quite uniquely informative; it's not everyday, after all, that you're able to learn the inner-workings of a greeting card corporate machine and the writers that fill their hallways.
That said, I wish David happiness and luck in his new home of Florida (or wherever he may be now). He's certainly the type that will embrace that fortune and happiness with the enthusiasm it deserves.… (mere)