In 2000, David Benioff (DB) debuted strongly with "The 25th Hour", a novel situated in NYC about three life-long 27-year old friends, covering the final day of freedom of one of them, who will begin a 7-year sentence the next day. In 2008, DB published a second, even better novel called "City of Thieves" about the siege of Leningrad in the Soviet Union in 1941, supposedly based on his grandfather's early life history. In the years in between and since, DB has worked as a versatile and highly-paid screenwriter.
In 2004, DB released this collection of short stories, which was well received in US media. DB's alter ego from the novels appears in only two of the 8 stories: he is a young Jewish male virgin, bright and a worrier, deeply insecure, but who is somehow tolerated, even befriended by blue-eyed superiors, expert womanizers and risk takers. Lev and Kolya in "City of Thieves" for example, Jakob and Monty in his debut novel, another.
Apart from his screen writer's successes, DB's versatility is evident from his choice of main characters in the 8 stories: a ruthless talent scout in the music business; a naïve Russian boy soldier in Chechnya; an obsessed 30-year old former football prodigy, a gay man seeing his partner waste away. Or the man who has lived sealed off for ages in his underground nuclear shelter until a bug invades his computer; the waitress in LA finally scoring a major part; the young man seeing a lion wink at him in NYC, and the love-truck, spurned young male trying to fulfill the final wishes of his ex-girlfriend's dead father.
David Benioff's novels are great stuff. This reader hopes he will find time to write many more despite the lures and rewards of Hollywood. This collection has great atmosphere and dialogues, but some of the stories lack a KO finishing punch. For Benioff fans, this collection is a must.