The book cover is an old V H S tape with the title Paperback: 304 pages
Publisher: Soft Skull Press / Counterpoint Press
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9781619024854

The Last Days of Video  is a literary comedy about video stores and the strange, wonderful, half-insane people who once worked there. In this “funny, surprisingly tender debut novel . . . the characters have enough heart and vivid imperfections to make their story irresistibly engaging. A novel that manages to be both very funny and very sad, with an unrepentant belief in both movies and love served with a cleverness and irreverence that are difficult to resist” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).

Description: It’s 2007, and independent video stores are dying. But Waring Wax is usually too drunk to worry about his declining business at Star Video, let alone his extinction in popular culture. But everything changes in his small college town when a bright and shiny Blockbuster opens nearby: Clearly, this means war.

The Last Days of Video is a love letter to movies, friendship, and terrible business decisions.

The Last Days of Video is, as the title suggests, an elegy for an era, but it’s an era that’s going out with a lot of kicking and screaming. Funny, raucous, and deliciously irreverent, Jeremy Hawkins’ debut novel offers up an engaging cast of characters who bicker and lust and love their way through the roller coaster ride of Star Video’s final days. This generous, big-hearted novel is a joy to read.” Ben Fountain, author of Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk 

“…what sets this debut novel apart is how Hawkins effortlessly reveals the inner workings of his characters….The novel is riddled with film references and easily lambastes the sneering superiority of cinephiles, while still preserving a sense of wonder for the magic of movies. The Last Days of Video is an unapologetic, quirky, and surprisingly moving elegy for the passing of the local rental hangouts.” —Booklist

The Last Days of Video is smart and snarky and in the end downright sweet. Waring and Alaura and Jeff are all solid characters we root for and want to follow home. This book made me miss my snobby old store in Ithaca, and my Betamax. It’s a feast for the cinephile. Well done.” —Stewart O’Nan, author of Henry, Himself

“This is a wonderful book! I laughed at least once a page. And the characters are so fresh and sad and eager. This book should be put in a time capsule. The Last Days of Video is like the literary missing link, about a time when things were really real.” —Daniel Wallace, author of Big Fish and Extraordinary Adventures

“…funny, surprisingly tender debut novel,…he characters have enough heart and vivid imperfections to make their story irresistibly engaging…They careen from one encounter to another, propelled by a generous dose of nostalgia, loud humor and narrative energy, but they’re given the depth to make casually beautiful phrases ring true.… A novel that manages to be both very funny and very sad, with an unrepentant belief in both movies and love served with a cleverness and irreverence that are difficult to resist.” —Kirkus, Starred Review

“Charming and fun, The Last Days of Video is a great debut.” —BookRiot

“[R]eading this book feels like sharing an inside joke with the author….This book hilariously takes on today’s culture, both embracing and mocking its often conflicting ideals of nostalgia and progress.” —ABA Bookselling This Week

“The author has a good time gently poking fun at the video-store culture that produced Quentin Tarantino.” —Publishers Weekly

“This is the Lucky Jim of video store novels. A comic page-turner—often really funny—with an originality and tenderness not often seen in first novels.” —Clyde Edgerton, author of Raney and The Bible Salesman

“For those who love film and talking about film, The Last Days of Video will be a joyride. For those who miss the independent video store, or for those who are still lucky enough to have one around the corner, this book will be a joy ride.” —Bookslut

“This hilarious novel manages to love, dissect, and make fun of our culture all at once. Jeremy Hawkins’ particular genius is in understanding that people are never more sympathetic than when they aren’t getting what they want. This whole book is saturated in loss, and yet I laughed through every page.” —Rebecca Lee, author of Bobcat and Other Stories

The Last Days of Video is a warm bucket of popcorn. Sit back, put your feet up and enjoy.” —3G1B