The packaging of this issue is probably the true star. It is comprised of a collection of short stories, a novella, a short story published on a shufflable deck of cards, and an inexplicable comb.
Contrary to what many are saying, I felt that the collection of stories was one of McSweeney's stronger issues. The lead story, "Mudder Tongue" was tragic story that didn't fold onto itself because of its strong use of humor. "Considering the bittersweet end of Susan Falls" took a while to get going, but really grabbed me after a point. It explored topics including the cognitive dissonance surrounding the shape of butts in pants. It just reminded me of my early college years and the weird way I tried to categorize the world intellectually using the bombardment of knowledge hurled at us at that time. "Driveway" was an incredible exploration of marriage or at least society's expectations of marriage. "Home to Harlem" had its moments, but I felt it didn't quite get the job done.
"Mr. Nobody at all" had an interesting form, told in a series of speeches at two memorial services. Though it had some interesting moments, occasional humor, I found it to be quite boring, over-long, and unfulfilling. It was well done, each character had a distinctive voice, I was just hoping for a story that equaled the genius of the premise. I saw that is was included in the "Best American Short stories". Given all the quality offerings in this issue alone, they could have picked a better choice.
The deck of cards story was fun and well written. I don't think I"ll be reading the whole thing again and again in different configuration though.