Dave Eggers: A Hologram for the King
You say you want an evolution? Eggers refines his fiction

Dave Eggers has played an overlarge role in the literary community in the past 15 years, even as his actual writing seemed mostly to exist in the periphery of causes.
He champions several. Eggers fights to increase the literacy and creativity of the nation’s youth through his 826 National writing centers. He continues to build and extend the reach of McSweeney’s, his independent, off-beat publishing house. He sheds light on broader humanitarian issues such as the genocide in Sudan or the social injustices that emerged in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. He appears to operate with a selfless passion for the things he feels really matter.
As a result, Eggers has seemed to use his books largely as vehicles to expose certain issues. His 2006 quasi-fictitious work, What is the What, followed real-life Sudanese refugee Valentino Achak Deng. Eggers’s prose brought attention to the atrocities of the genocide Deng endured in his African nation, and the writer subsequently appeared at speaking engagements with his subject. He helped found the Valentino Achak Deng Foundation, a non-profit organization committed to increasing access to education in Sudan.
Even Eggers’s earlier works, though not tied to specific issues, centered on idealism, delivering a set of certain messages rather than existing purely as literary works of art. Though his debut memoir, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, contained dazzling prose and introduced Eggers as a fresh, innovative new talent—and a model for hipster stylists since—it was not a tightly wrought work. Eggers sometimes let his need to exhaustively detail every aspect of his life story get in the way of crafting a consistently compelling narrative.
He followed A Heartbreaking Work… with You Shall Know Our Velocity, an inspired, if unremarkable, account of two friends traveling the world and whimsically handing out cash to those they felt in need.
For all Eggers has published, You Shall Know Our Velocity stood as his only proper novel until McSweeney’s released A Hologram for the King late last month. Again, his new novel emerged from a topical issue—the effects of the current economic downturn on the businessman whose skills have been rendered obsolete by today’s fast-paced society, technology and the proliferation of outsourced labor.
A Hologram for the King, in a principal difference from previous work, examines a societal condition that cannot be remedied, the byproduct of an insidious set of circumstances. The novel does not indict the banks, the government, or any factor that caused the recession. It concerns itself less with exposing every unjust aspect of the downturn and more with the character of Alan Clay, the novel’s protagonist. Clay exemplifies the middle-aged businessman that the recession has chewed up and spit out.
While A Heartbreaking Work… centered on a hungry generation at the precipice of setting the world on fire with its vision, Clay belongs to a generation already scorched. At 54, Clay heads a team of young go-getters trying to secure a contract to provide IT for King Abdullah Economic City, or KAEC, a nascent Saudi Arabian outpost developers hope to turn into the next Dubai.
To himself and to his younger colleagues, Clay seems “more burden than boon, more harm than good, irrelevant, superfluous to the forward progress of the world.” He only heads the team, whose presentation to the King rests on the strength of a hologram Clay’s company has developed, because he once met the King’s nephew. Clay’s bosses feel that this tissue-thin connection might give their team the edge over competitors.
While many writers strive for a sense of timelessness, Eggers locks readers into the present. He specifically mentions the “BP leak,” the last space shuttle flights, and, above all, the Great Recession, an event that only serves to aggravate Clay’s plentiful problems.
What problems? After being ousted at Schwinn after, ironically, a botched attempt to outsource bicycle labor, Clay made a series of poor investments and accumulated a good deal of debt. He must pay his daughter’s college tuition, as well as mediate her relationship with his troubled ex-wife. He grows desperate for his company to be awarded the KAEC contract, and he convinces himself that the payday for this victory will solve all his problems. On top of everything else—well, at least on top of his neck—he finds a growth. It increasingly annoys and irritates him, and his worries of malignancy metastasize.