HugoSF

With his employer stock options worth nothing and a crippling tax bill ahead of him, Hugo Storm sits sheepishly in the office of an accountant days before the Great Bust of 2000. "Eight hundred dollars," the accountant tells him. "That's all I owe?" Hugo beams. "No," replies the accountant, "that's my fee."

It's a sinking moment in the life of a young internet salesman for whom everything is on the verge of going south.

For anyone who lived and worked through the Internet boom – or even if you didn't – the novel masterfully evokes that time, its people and its sentiments with "sumptuous" language and "characters that you immediately fall in love with." It charts seven years in the life of Hugo Storm, a genXer from New Jersey living in San Francisco from the height of the Boom, down through the Bust and ending at the teasing upswell of the real estate bubble.

Although fixed in time, HugoSF is more than an historical chronicle. It's a cautionary tale of truth, work and economics that makes a reader ponder his or her own relationship to work. To the up and down cycles of economics. To families and friendship. And to the difficult realities we choose to avoid in our own lives: all those little stories we tell ourselves because it's…easier?

Unlike the seemingly endless supply of fabricated icons of celebrity, wealth and tragedy, Hugo Storm is a refreshing, truly American everyman elevated through storytelling into a hallmark character of our time. As life goes south, then slightly north again, he is forced to confront an inescapable triad of truth, work and economics in an era in which nothing is truly as it seems.

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HugoSF

With his employer stock options worth nothing and a crippling tax bill ahead of him, Hugo Storm sits sheepishly in the office of an accountant days before the Great Bust of 2000. "Eight hundred dollars," the accountant tells him. "That's all I owe?" Hugo beams. "No," replies the accountant, "that's my fee."

It's a sinking moment in the life of a young internet salesman for whom everything is on the verge of going south.

For anyone who lived and worked through the Internet boom – or even if you didn't – the novel masterfully evokes that time, its people and its sentiments with "sumptuous" language and "characters that you immediately fall in love with." It charts seven years in the life of Hugo Storm, a genXer from New Jersey living in San Francisco from the height of the Boom, down through the Bust and ending at the teasing upswell of the real estate bubble.

Although fixed in time, HugoSF is more than an historical chronicle. It's a cautionary tale of truth, work and economics that makes a reader ponder his or her own relationship to work. To the up and down cycles of economics. To families and friendship. And to the difficult realities we choose to avoid in our own lives: all those little stories we tell ourselves because it's…easier?

Unlike the seemingly endless supply of fabricated icons of celebrity, wealth and tragedy, Hugo Storm is a refreshing, truly American everyman elevated through storytelling into a hallmark character of our time. As life goes south, then slightly north again, he is forced to confront an inescapable triad of truth, work and economics in an era in which nothing is truly as it seems.

6.99 In Stock
HugoSF

HugoSF

by Jeffrey Hannan
HugoSF

HugoSF

by Jeffrey Hannan

eBook

$6.99 

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Overview

With his employer stock options worth nothing and a crippling tax bill ahead of him, Hugo Storm sits sheepishly in the office of an accountant days before the Great Bust of 2000. "Eight hundred dollars," the accountant tells him. "That's all I owe?" Hugo beams. "No," replies the accountant, "that's my fee."

It's a sinking moment in the life of a young internet salesman for whom everything is on the verge of going south.

For anyone who lived and worked through the Internet boom – or even if you didn't – the novel masterfully evokes that time, its people and its sentiments with "sumptuous" language and "characters that you immediately fall in love with." It charts seven years in the life of Hugo Storm, a genXer from New Jersey living in San Francisco from the height of the Boom, down through the Bust and ending at the teasing upswell of the real estate bubble.

Although fixed in time, HugoSF is more than an historical chronicle. It's a cautionary tale of truth, work and economics that makes a reader ponder his or her own relationship to work. To the up and down cycles of economics. To families and friendship. And to the difficult realities we choose to avoid in our own lives: all those little stories we tell ourselves because it's…easier?

Unlike the seemingly endless supply of fabricated icons of celebrity, wealth and tragedy, Hugo Storm is a refreshing, truly American everyman elevated through storytelling into a hallmark character of our time. As life goes south, then slightly north again, he is forced to confront an inescapable triad of truth, work and economics in an era in which nothing is truly as it seems.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940032945482
Publisher: Jeffrey Hannan
Publication date: 10/28/2011
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 768 KB

About the Author

After fourteen Fellini-esque years in its grip, Jeffrey Hannan fled the internet industry for the wilds of Puna, Hawai'i to start a tea farm. He lives there and in San Francisco and writes under the moniker, 'A Gentle Iconoclast in Paradise'.

HugoSF is his second novel. The first is in a safe deposit box; it will be mined of any useful material and then burned.

A former book reviewer for the Gay and Lesbian Times, he was raised outside of Washington, DC and studied at Virginia Tech, Catholic University, San Francisco State, San Diego Mesa College, and San Diego City College. He eventually earned a BA in Literature/Writing (cum laude) from the University of California - San Diego, at which point he eschewed graduate school largely due to factors of fatigue and poverty, and to a lesser degree because of a poor understanding of politics. He remains bitter about having missed magna cum laude by a mere .05 but finds solace in pulling weeds and slumming at the beaches of fine hotels.

Jeffrey Hannan is on the web at http://jeffreyhannan.com.

Discover more about Hugo Storm at http://hugosf.com.

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