
There’s a certain kind of moment you don’t recognize until later—the quiet ones that change your direction without asking permission.
Mine came in a used bookstore.
The owner didn’t say much. He just walked up, placed Bad Haircut in my hands, and said, “Read this.”
No urgency. No explanation. Just certainty.
He’d mentioned Tom Perrotta before. I’d filed it away with all the other I’ll get to it authors. The list was long. He wasn’t near the top.
But something about that moment—something in the way the book didn’t feel optional—cut through the noise.
So I read it.
And somewhere between the first page and the last… something shifted.
What keeps pulling me back isn’t just the stories—it’s the people inside them.
Perrotta doesn’t build characters to serve a plot. He lets them exist first. And that changes everything.
He goes the extra mile in a way that doesn’t announce itself. There’s no dramatic spotlight, no forced moment telling you what matters. Instead, he works in the margins—the hesitation in a sentence, the wrong thing said at the wrong time, the silence that lingers just a second too long.
That’s where the truth lives.
His characters aren’t polished. They’re not particularly heroic. Half the time they don’t even understand themselves. But that’s exactly why they land.
They feel human.
Not the version we rehearse for other people—but the one that shows up when things don’t go the way we planned. Insecure. Conflicted. Trying. Failing. Trying again, sometimes worse than before.
And because of that, you don’t just read about them—you recognize them.
Worse… you recognize yourself.
That’s where the shift happens. That’s where you start to care.
Not because the story tells you to. But because you’ve seen that version of a person before. Maybe you’ve been that person. Maybe you still are.
There are a couple of moments in Bad Haircut that never really left me.
One of them is the way Perrotta describes the city—not as one place, but as two towns pretending to share the same space. There’s this invisible line. You cross it, and everything shifts. The tone. The people. The expectations.
No sign telling you it’s there. But you feel it.
That stuck with me because it’s real.
I grew up around cities like that. I’ve walked those lines without knowing what they were until I was already on the other side. Places where one block feels like possibility and the next feels like something closing in on you. Same city. Different rules.
Then there’s another moment—the one that hits a little closer.
The protagonist gets involved with an older woman while he’s still in high school. For him, it isn’t casual. It isn’t a story to tell his friends. It’s everything. The kind of moment that rewrites how you see yourself, how you think the world works.
And then she tells him she’s going to marry someone else.
Just like that.
It’s messy. Complicated. A little reckless. The kind of situation adults would label a mistake and move on from.
But for him, it’s not a footnote.
It’s a fracture.
That’s what Perrotta understands—something we tend to forget once we’ve put distance between who we were and who we are now.
Back then, everything mattered.
Every conversation carried weight. Every touch meant something. Every loss felt permanent.
There was no such thing as just a moment.
And when you read it now, older, supposedly wiser… you realize how much of that intensity never really left. It just learned how to hide better.
My all-time favorites are Count a Lonely Cadence by Gordon Weaver and Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison.
Those books move differently.
They carry weight in a more deliberate way—language that feels carved instead of spoken, themes that stretch beyond the page into something larger. Identity. Isolation. The cost of being seen—or not seen at all.
They demand something from you.
But Bad Haircut doesn’t move like that.
It doesn’t reach for myth. It doesn’t try to explain the world.
It stays smaller. Closer.
And somehow… that makes it hit just as hard.
Because where Weaver and Ellison deal in systems—power, institutions, identity under pressure—Perrotta works in something quieter.
He shows you how those same forces live in ordinary spaces. In school hallways. In neighborhoods. In the small decisions that don’t feel like decisions at all.
Not whether you survive a system…
But whether you become the kind of person who never questions it.
I return to these books because they recognize the life I’ve lived—even the parts I didn’t at the time.
Not the dramatic moments. Not the ones that make stories worth telling at a bar.
The quiet ones.
The ones that shape you before you even realize something is changing.
I’ve read other work by Tom Perrotta. Good work. Solid work.
But nothing hits me like Bad Haircut.
There’s something about it that doesn’t let go. Or maybe it never needed to—it just waited until I caught up to it.
It might even make my desert island list.
Count a Lonely Cadence.
Invisible Man.
And Bad Haircut.
Three different kinds of weight. Three different ways of telling the truth.
If you looked at those copies, you wouldn’t see pristine pages. You’d see wear. Creases in the spine. Edges softened from being opened too many times.
Dog-eared pages.
I hate dog-earing a book.
Always have.
But these?
These don’t feel like objects you preserve. They feel like something you return to—again and again—until the marks stop feeling like damage and start feeling like proof.
Proof that something in there wasn’t just worth reading—
It was worth needing.
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