Joe College by Tom Perrotta


Joe College
Title : Joe College
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0312361785
ISBN-10 : 9780312361785
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 320
Publication : First published January 1, 2000

For many college students, spring break means fun and sun in Florida. For Danny, a Yale junior, it means two weeks behind the wheel of the "Roach Coach," his father's lunch truck, which plies the parking lots of office parks in central New Jersey.

But Danny can use the time behind the coffee urn to try to make sense of a love life that's gotten a little complicated. There's loyal and patient hometown honey Cindy and her recently dropped bombshell to contend with, and there's also lissome Polly back in New Haven--with her shifting moods, perfect thrift store dresses, and inconvenient liaison with a dashing professor. If girl problems aren't enough, there's the constant menace of the Lunch Monsters, a group of thugs who think Danny has planted the Roach Coach in their territory.

Joe College is Tom Perrotta's warmest and funniest fiction yet, a comic journey into the dark side of love, higher education, and food service.


Joe College Reviews


  • Fabian

    I guess it takes considerable je ne sais quoi to read a writer’s work & enjoy it so much that simultaneously you want to read his other works, in my case “Little Children” (“Election” still being on my queue). Perrotta wrote that one after “Joe College” & it is as serious as this one is fun. Perrotta, I am sorry, surpasses Nick Hornby (his mediocre “Slam” is similar to this in the way our main man must conserve his manhood as soon as his biological function to create new life has been breached & adulthood prematurely-proclaimed). He even manages to surpass Pulitzer-darling Michael Chabon’s ever-popular “The Mysteries of Pittsburgh"! (And I’ll even forgive the fact that Danny “Joe College” is an impassioned Kerouac aficionado, too).

    It's because “Little Children” exists, because its so very different from this one,--an enormous leap in maturity and craftsmanship--that I know the writer to be incredibly gifted. His views of returning to suburbia is simultaneously bleak AND robust with possibility. Nostalgia for the college experience is manifested, for sure. To me, B. E. Ellis' “The Rules of Attraction” is THE quintessential college novel, THE 80's TITAN, but this comes a very close second, with a wacky pathos all its own. A quaint smallness which is synonymous with the harrowing (though... necessary?) undergraduate student experience.

  • Matt

    Perrotta does a really good job of making you like Danny, the main character. He's got a ton of flaws, and he makes a lot of mistakes, but you know deep down he's a good person. He knows when he's doing something wrong, but he's a young guy in college and does it anyway. I think most dudes can relate.

    I've heard people say they don't like how he doesn't ever have to take responsibility for his actions. Fuck that. Smart kids get away with stuff. Some people are lucky and that's the way shit happens sometimes. I like how Perotta doesn't take the usual route with good overcoming evil over and over again.

    Anyway, this is by no means a deep book. It's a simple, fun, coming-of-age story and I actually really enjoyed it. But I was also once a college kid who made some dumb decisions. Oh well.

  • Allan Hough

    This book sucks. It's just good enough to keep you reading through to the end just to see what happens, but in my book, a book like that is worse that a fully bad book. At least with a fully bad book you can just put it down right away and forget about it.

  • Miranda

    Danny is a lucky guy; however, he is also a big weenie who has the gumption to fight the mobsters of his town, but he refuses to face his own demons. That is okay, though, because he does not have to face his demons. He does not have to own up to using his hometown girlfriend Cindy, he does not have to worry about his father's "Roach Coach" that is damaged, and he does not fight for his new interest Polly. Danny is just a static guy who observes life but never reaches deep in his soul to live the life he wants. I enjoyed this book (I read it on an airplane) because Danny is just someone I hope I never will be like.

  • Elizabeth K.

    This is the same guy that wrote Little Children, and Election, which is probably more famous as a movie. Anyway, according to the author this novel is based on his own college experiences in the early 80s. We've got a kid from a working class background in New Jersey who is at Yale on a scholarship, casually dating a girl from back home whom he doesn't really want to be dating, and hopelessly pursing another classmate who really isn't available. Also, a cast of wacky roommates. I had mixed responses to this book -- on the plus side, it's very readable and the characters are extremely recognizable -- I think I went to college with most of them myself -- and I think the author was very successful with showing some of the tensions related to that kid who is breaking ground by going off to a prestigious college. However, parts of the book also got into that over-the-top satire that goes over my head, and I get the feeling that this is an example of that thing where otherwise thoughtful people look back at their own college experiences and they get so caught up in their own emotional memories that they can't quite take a step back and figure out which parts are more universally meaningful. I personally have some memories of college that I fondly remember as OMG that was SO funny and SO wild ... but then I also realize that I remember it that way because it happened to ME and other people don't have any reason to find it funny, wild, or even all that interesting. This book feels a little too autobiographical to me, like that guy at the party who is convinced his college stories are much more hilarious than yours, and completely misses the point that EVERYONE feels that way about stuff that happened to them.

    Grade: B-
    Recommended: To people who like higher ed in fiction, probably especially anyone who went to Yale or a similar college.

  • Pat Herndon

    Preface: I love Tom Perrotta and have already read Little Children, The Abstinence Teacher and The Left Overs. Also...my high school boyfriend left me behind as I attended junior college so he could attend Yale. Yikes. Such a ring of familiarity to the plot (but I was NOT pregnant!). The years even match very closely. I am sure my old boyfriend's time at Yale over-lapped with Perrotta's. Thus, I was primed to enjoy this book. I probably would have given this book a 5-star rating, but the main character, Danny, does seem to have an unrealistically amazing talent for avoiding all consequences of his behavior. Heck, he evens gets away with drunk driving. I think if you read carefully, you can assume his luck ends in the moments just after the book ends....but you can't really be sure. After all, Danny's a smart guy who leads a charmed life. Still, this was an interesting, enjoyable book.

  • Kim Trusty

    You know those guys who consider themselves to be "nice guys" but are actually d-bags? Well, Perotta's protagonist, Danny, is a "nice guy". A New Jersey native at Yale, Danny is caught between his working class beginnings and his posh (possible) future. You know what? I'm not writing another word about this book. Other than it's no "Election". Or "Little Children".

  • Amar Pai

    Exceedingly minor memoir by some kid who went to Yale. He breaks up with his girlfriend, does the required reading, works at a lunch truck. Who cares.

  • Elizabeth Hesseltine

    About 7 months in the life of a college student: he goes to parties, works in the school cafeteria, gets laid, and drinks beer. Not much changed between the first chapter and the last.

  • Cheyne Nomura

    I love Tom Perrotta, and I really enjoyed this book, which I was surprised to discover, since I thought I’d heard of all of his books. This is the most relatable one I’ve read, which has the hallmarks of most of his books: a male in crisis, sex, suburbia. Very easy, lighthearted read.

  • Tara

    I like the way Perrotta writes--his word choices, his analogies, his detailed descriptions, his perceptive wit. While I enjoyed reading Joe College, I felt that the main character Danny was unlikeable and selfish through parts of the book, especially when dealing with Cindy, his summer "townie" fling. Perhaps this was the intention, to paint Danny as book-smart but relationship-dumb, and despite his flaws, you can't really blame the kid for his missteps. Matt is Danny's co-worker at the college cafeteria and supposed friend, but I just couldn't understand why Danny kept the annoying guy around. I wanted to kick his ass a few times myself. But that's Perrotta's genius, he transports you to a world that is stunningly real--an authentic college experience--a young man navigating through a maze of schoolwork, strange Yale traditions, eccentric hangers-on, girls and running his father's food truck business [into the ground].(I had thought there would be more cooking in this book, but the food truck just dispenses factory-made sandwiches, coffee and candy bars. Not a foodie book.) The publisher gets bad points for multiple typos in the e-version for Nook--misspellings, solo parentheses, page numbers embedded in the text. No fault of Tom Perrotta, of course, just the publisher's lack of proofreading skills. These errors can be distracting, and it's not the first e-book to have this issue.

  • Isabel

    I was surprised by how much I enjoyed this book. At it's best, it's a story about growing up. The narrator's awareness starts as he recognizes the stereotypes around him, then he discovers that he has been living up to a shallow stereotype of himself as "Joe College." The tone reminds me of Huck Finn. The narrator has a very self-involved view, but despite that manages to reveal complex issues in the world around him. Young women involved with older men, pressures of parents on their children, difficulties of gender roles interfering with people expressing themselves or connecting with each other...

    The bit with the Lunch Monsters was a hair extreme, but it provided a nice foil to Max's father's observation that the small business man is some kind of romantic hero of capitalism. Nothing is ever that simple, as the narrator shows us when his father has so many struggles with his own self-run business.

    The ending was a bit disappointing. He seemed to have come full circle and started on another meaningless conquest. But then, maybe that was the point? I dunno.

    This is a funny, clever book with incredibly articulate descriptions of the delayed adolescence of college life. The plot was well paced and kept the pages turning. Great summer reading and totally worth picking up.

  • Melissa

    I don't usually read this kind of book, not at all. I took it off my step-mother's shelf while I was home for the holidays and read it. And I enjoyed it! I mean, it's funny, and Tom Perrotta makes writing look so effortlessly easy. I'm completely jealous of how he never struggles with making every page move, tells stories within stories, creates dialogue that sounds like a movie that isn't stupid, and all that jazz.

    So, it's not a deep book or a heavy one, but it's entertaining, inoffensive (that is, he didn't seem to be trying to make any points in the book that offended me; in fact, even though it is a boys' book, I think the women come out really well), and, most importantly, it's satisfying. The ends are not loosed or frayed, every detail fits so nicely.

    I really recommend you give a copy of this book to any male college writing major because A) he'll really enjoy it, B) he'll relate with it, and C) he'll learn a thing or two about craft when writing about college life, as every young man I knew during my college English major years was so wont to do.

  • Taka

    A Funny Page-turner--

    Especially after the dark world of Ellroy, this came as a relief and grateful change of pace. It's a breeze of a read that makes you forget about the flow of time and immerse you in a pleasant, lighthearted fictional dream.

    Being an Ivy graduate myself, I thoroughly enjoyed his portrayal of Yale and what nightmares could befall on an undergraduate. His observations are both funny and dead-on when it comes to describing certain actions the characters in his story do and the peculiar atmosphere that prevails at an Ivy school.

    Perrotta writes plainly in the tradition of Vonnegut and it makes me appreciate the simplicity of language all the more as my writing style tends to fall on the opposite side of the fence.

    Overall, highly recommended, and I can't wait to read his other works.

  • Ravi

    Danny is an introspective, intelligent kid from working class New Jersey going through his Junior year as an English major at Yale in the early eighties. He doesn't fit in at home in New Jersey but seems to fit in at Yale even though all his friends come from wealthy upper class families. The most interesting parts of the book take place back home in NJ with his parents, his friends or his summer fling with a local girl. He is a likable kid even though he doesn't always make the conventional right decision. He can be self centered but even those selfish decisions end up OK. Most of the book is the ordinary that most of us experience but the author does add in a few dramatic elements that speed things up without distracting too much from Joe College. All the characters are what you would expect in the real world - shades of grey versus black or white.

  • Candice

    I just trudged through a whole book about a guy I don’t like. Where’s my medal?

  • Kristie

    Since most reviewers already give a brief summary of the book, I will skip that and get right to my review.

    I love this book!!! I found it on the bargain shelf at Borders a few years ago and took a chance on it. What a fun story and hilarious cast of characters. I have since read every book written by Mr. Perrotta and will continue to do so. None of the others have quite made the same impression on me as Joe College but (for me) the emotion of not knowing what to expect and then to be completely, pleasantly surprised does not come around often. I found it to be a real gem. I thought it was much better than Perrotta's "Bad Haircut" or The Wishbones".

  • Abigail Hillinger

    Not Perrotta's best. Not nearly.

    Kind of a simple story. College boy likes college girl, college boy unknowingly gets involved with townie girl from back home, college boy gets townie girl preggers. Add in some stories about working at the dining hall and some random gang violence (even though it's set at Yale), and that's basically the story.

    It wasn't comparable to Election, Little Children, or Wishbones, but still. It's Tom Perrotta and deserves even a quick skim. Maybe I simply need to re-read it...but honestly, I'd rather re-read the three books listed above.

  • Scott

    I enjoyed this book about class differences, life in an Ivy League school in the 8os, and the daily travails of the lunch cart industry. Danny, the main character, is a likeable guy who takes us on a first-person account of his college years, with several hilarious anecdotes along the way.

    I didn't like many references to books (most "classics") that I hadn't read - while the author is being true to the 1st person narrative of our English major main character, I just felt uncultured - and set the book down to Google references to books I've never read.

  • Jake

    While nowhere near the level of literary heft and satirical bite as Little Children, Joe College is still an entirely enjoyable read with some probing questions into the relationship between upper and lower classes, between privileged Ivy Leaguers and the townies that serve them.

    The plot tends to meander and Perotta fleshes out relationships that are irrelevant at best, but the book overall is a great read. Good on its own, but less enviable when compared to Little Children.

  • Karen Germain

    I discovered Perrotta a few months ago and I am continuing in my quest to read all of his novels. I had read some bad reviews about this one, but I liked it just as much as I liked his other books. I found it relatable and entertaining. I really liked Danny, especially since he wasn't perfect and often made bad choices. I liked that he stuck to his convictions, even if to his own detriment. The ending was a touch odd. Perrotta is great at writing ending paragraphs that make an impression.

  • Jill

    This was great - it reminded me of a Curtis Sittenfeld book in the amazing little details that made it a joy to read. I did not like it as much as Little Children but I think this was one of Perrotta's first books. He does a great job making fun of some of the ridiculousness of college life, for example a section in the beginning on highlighting that I thought was basically brilliant. The overall story is very entertaining with a thought provoking main character.

  • Michael

    This is another amazing witty book by Tom Perrotha. The characters are hysterical and not forgettable,which is a huge plus. It reminded me a lot college,because of the mess the friends got them into to. Danny and Chuck were my favorite character,they were just hilarious. Also I can relate this book, the characters often reminded me of myself in certain ways. However I was disappointed with the ending, but other than that this is a good read;highly recommend.

  • Yuckamashe

    You know it's bad when two characters have similar names and you keep confusing them and instead of figuring out who is who you just keep reading. That was when I realized I just didn't give a fuck. I was so bored and uninterested I didn't even love or hate any of the characters. I kept reading because it wasn't bad enough to hate. Douche college guys talking like acting like the lame dudes they are.

  • Joel

    I read this in 2002, while on summer break from college. I know for sure I finished it. I remember nothing about it. Therefore, I can only determine that it was, at best, OK. I know I didn't hate it because I but Tom Perrotta on my to-read list and ended up liking both Election and Little Children quite a bit more.

  • Damion Cavicchio

    I've figured out that I hate Tom Perrotta's style of writing. He's not interesting. I feel like he is Jonathan Tropper Lite. He isn't as funny or as witty as a Tropper no matter how hard he tries. I think I now realize the difference between a story and a book. A story is a concept, while a book is a complete package with an ending. Perrotta's is an author of stories. Not books.