onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Reading: Book excerpt: “Dream State” by Eric Puchner
Share
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Search
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.
News

Book excerpt: “Dream State” by Eric Puchner

Last updated: March 9, 2025 7:35 am
OnlyTrustedInfo.com
Share
6 Min Read
Book excerpt: “Dream State” by Eric Puchner
SHARE

dream-state-cover-doubleday-1280.jpg

Doubleday


We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.

An Oprah’s Book Club pick, Eric Puchner’s “Dream State” (Doubleday) is a sweeping saga that explores how choices – big and small – shape lives and families for decades. 

It starts, very charmingly, with the planning for a wedding at a summer house in Montana. Cece is about to marry Charlie, but then Charlie’s best friend shows up, and their plans veer off in ways nobody expects.

Read an excerpt below. 


“Dream State” by Eric Puchner

Prefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.


By the time it occurred to Cece that her mother was dying, she was dead. Even then, it seemed like possibly a mistake, like there was no way in hell her mother would have agreed to it. Cece hunched through the memorial service, unable to speak or move or smile. People hugged her, one after another, a series of random blows. At the national cemetery, she stood on the perfect lawn rolling down to a smudge of ocean in the distance, the tombstones a run of dominoes waiting to be tipped, feeling like she’d been beamed to an alien planet. She could not fathom her own fingers. It was a military burial, with guards of honor and a flag-folding ceremony and a lone bugler playing “Taps.” The long, sorrowful notes floated over the cemetery, turning everything into the tragic plot point in a movie: the gravesites and their wilting flowers, the guards of honor frozen like statues, the hole in the ground where her mother would be lowered and transformed into a skeleton. Such was the grace and beauty of the bugler’s playing that Cece, returning to Earth for a moment, couldn’t help being moved. It seemed to give form to the precious void inside her. Then the bugler stopped in midnote, as if he’d forgotten what song he was performing. He turned red with embarrassment. Finally, he took the bugle from his lips and shook it, and it played the lost note for a second, as if possessed by a ghost. It wasn’t a real instrument at all, Cece realized, but a stereo made to look like one. The thing had run out of charge. A couple of the mourners giggled. Cece glanced behind her, startled. Later, in the middle of the eulogy, the bugle began playing again from its case.

Strangeness and sorrow. Strangeness and sorrow. Cece went back to school, amazed that her life still existed. My mother is dead, she told herself, over and over, not immune to its dramatic value. It was precisely this sense of being in a play or a movie that made her death feel temporary. At any minute the play would end and her mother would be alive again, taking her to the beach like she used to every weekend; Cece would massage her head while they watched stupid shows together, dizzy with the smell of sweat and jojoba oil. (That smell! When Cece was little, she used to suck on her mother’s hair, put strands of it in her mouth.) Cece missed her so much it howled through her like a wind. She stopped eating. On the soccer field she stood there shivering, staring at the grass. Her friends, understanding at first, eventually gave up on her, stopped asking her to parties and the Galleria, to bonfires at the beach. When her father wasn’t home, Cece sometimes sneaked into his room and stripped the mattress, gazing at the orphaned sweat stain, pale as a shadow, where her mother used to sleep.

Once, the phone rang and Cece picked it up: her mother’s hair salon asking to confirm an appointment. “She died,” Cece said, perhaps too softly to be heard, because the woman on the phone said, “I believe so, yes. A coloring. Missed the last one, so wanted to confirm.” The next day, Cece drove to the hair salon and showed up for the appointment. The hairdresser didn’t question who she was. He led her to a chair, then grabbed a book of color swatches and handed it to her. Cece flipped through the book—a rainbow of tiny rabbit’s feet—and found one that matched her mother’s hair. She smelled the swatch, but of course it smelled like nothing. She cried and cried, for the first time since the funeral. The hairdresser, perhaps used to such things, ignored her. He painted and foiled Cece’s hair, then rinsed it out and revealed the hideous product of her grief.

      
Excerpted from “Dream State” by Eric Puchner. Reprinted with permission from Doubleday, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright © 2025 by Eric Puchner.


Get the book here:

“Dream State” by Eric Puchner

Buy locally from Bookshop.org


For more info:

More

You Might Also Like

Congressional intern killed in DC shooting

Tamim Iqbal suffers heart attack during DPL match | Cricket News

LA mayor announces curfew for part of downtown after days of protests

Trump megabill faces GOP holdouts amid marathon vote-a-rama

Yemen’s Houthi fighters down $200m worth of US drones in under six weeks | Houthis News

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Share
Previous Article Book excerpt: “Dream Count” by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Book excerpt: “Dream Count” by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Next Article Book excerpt: “The Antidote” by Karen Russell Book excerpt: “The Antidote” by Karen Russell

Latest News

PFL Brussels 2026: Why the Odds Are Stacked Against the Underdogs in a Night of Dominant Favorites
PFL Brussels 2026: Why the Odds Are Stacked Against the Underdogs in a Night of Dominant Favorites
Sports May 23, 2026
Ja Morant Spotted at WNBA’s Dream vs. Wings: What His Presence Means for the NBA Star and Women’s Basketball
Ja Morant Spotted at WNBA’s Dream vs. Wings: What His Presence Means for the NBA Star and Women’s Basketball
Sports May 23, 2026
WWE Clash in Italy: Rhea Ripley vs. Jade Cargill Rematch Confirmed—Why This Title Showdown Matters
WWE Clash in Italy: Rhea Ripley vs. Jade Cargill Rematch Confirmed—Why This Title Showdown Matters
Sports May 23, 2026
Gerrit Cole’s Triumphant Return: 6 Shutout Innings After 569-Day Absence, But Yankees Fall to Rays
Gerrit Cole’s Triumphant Return: 6 Shutout Innings After 569-Day Absence, But Yankees Fall to Rays
Sports May 23, 2026
//
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
© 2026 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.