Manual for How to Live Magnificently

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A01=Ernie Wang
Author_Ernie Wang
Category=FBA
Category=FU
Category=FYB
charm
Dayton
debut
disney
eq_anthologies-novellas-short-stories
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
family
forthcoming
humor
illness
joke
land
Las Vegas
literary
pan
park
peter
relationships
stories
terminal
theme

Product details

  • ISBN 9781968209100
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Acre Books
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This debut collection turns the ordinary into sweeping tragicomedy, probing the small, daily confrontations that shape a life well lived.

In a debut collection at once deeply felt and delightfully playful, Ernie Wang presents ordinary people struggling with challenges that confront many today: how to find steady, meaningful work; how to manage when our healthcare system fails us; how to navigate thorny relationships with lovers, with friends, with children; how to keep one’s dreams alive, and how to let them go. The thirteen stories in Manual for How to Live Magnificently are intriguingly linked, with narrators becoming players and players becoming narrators. Several stories feature cameos by the irrepressible seventy-something Mabel Rogerson, who serves by turns as catalyst, comic relief, and means to catharsis. The book toggles among dramatically different locales—Dayton, Ohio; Las Vegas; Disneyland; Kamisoshigaya, Japan—drawing them thematically into a shared orbit. 

Though each of Wang’s offerings has heft and poignancy, the stories also serve up superb comic set pieces. A fake fortuneteller forgoes his crystal ball in favor of a snow globe; a priest moonlights as a professional wrestler named the Grim Preacher; a troubled lawyer who reluctantly cat-sits for a friend winds up finding solace with Killer and Hoedaddy. Revelations are reached at the male strip club Dayton Dix, or during a ritual spanking at Hofbräuhaus just off the Las Vegas Strip, or on Captain Hook’s flying galleon during a theme park ride. And almost everyone eventually ends up at Applebee’s. When storylines converge in a terrifying tragedy, Wang takes the opportunity to explore the complexity of family, to deepen our understanding of sacrifice and the many ways people demonstrate love for one another.

Ernie Wang is a second-generation Chinese-Japanese-American. He grew up on US military bases in Japan, and for a short while worked as a contract specialist for the Department of Defense. His short fiction and essays appear in Chicago Quarterly Review, The Georgia Review, McSweeney’s, Mississippi Review, Prairie Schooner, The Southern Review, Story, Threepenny Review, Gulf Coast, and elsewhere.

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