The night in question Stories

Tobias Wolff, 1945-

Book - 1996

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Wolff, Tobias
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Wolff, Tobias Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf : Distributed by Random House c1996.
Language
English
Main Author
Tobias Wolff, 1945- (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
206 p.
ISBN
9780679781554
9780679402183
  • Mortals
  • Casualty
  • Powder
  • The life of the body
  • Flyboys
  • Sanity
  • The other Miller
  • Two boys and a girl
  • Migraine
  • The chain
  • Smorgasbord
  • Lady's dream
  • The night in question
  • Firelight
  • Bullet in the brain.
Review by Booklist Review

With a kind of raging tenderness, the 14 stories in Wolff's new collection reveal betrayal and love of friends and family, whether on an ambush in Vietnam or in the rooms of a home. Some of the best of these stories could be part of Wolff's beautiful memoir, This Boy's Life (1989). Shelter is precarious. In the story "Firelight," a boy and his mother look at furnished apartments to rent (they can't afford to leave their dingy boardinghouse, but they're looking); he glimpses what seems to be an idyllic family scene around the fireplace. That feeling of being shut out never leaves him. In "Flyboys," a boy deserts his best friend because he cannot bear the bereavement in his friend's family. The sorrow appalls him; it might be catching. It's a view of the world where "wounds did not heal and things did not work out for the best." In "Migraine," a wry, heartrending story, a lesbian woman thinks her lover is leaving and is such a wreck that her lover just can't leave, for now; she covers her lover's hands "as if to keep them there." Wolff is ironic yet totally engaged. He's candid about the times when we are weak, corrupt, and afraid, yet you come away from his stories surprised, also, by the kindness among us. (Reviewed Aug. 1996)0679402187Hazel Rochman

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

While some gifted writers make a show of their virtuosity, others, like Wolff, make what they do seem so artless that only upon reflection is the meticulous craftsmanship and intelligence of their work apparent. Wolff's first book of short fiction in over a decade (after his two acclaimed memoirs, This Boy's Life and In Pharaoh's Army) finds him writing at the top of the form. In each of the 14 stories in this splendid collection, Wolff's tone is unadorned, and a good number of the events he describes are just this side of prosaic; yet they are graced by an unerring sense of just how much depth can be mined from even a seemingly inconsequential situation. In "Firelight," an unnamed narrator recollects looking at rental apartments with his glamorous but impoverished mother; their brief interaction with another family showing them an apartment they can't possibly afford opens up into a meditation on home, family and belonging. The book begins with the wry and surprising "Mortals," in which a journalist is fired for writing the obituary of a man who proves to be very much alive. Other strong stories include "Flyboys," about an uneasy trio of youthful friends, and "The Chain," in which a man's desire for revenge after his daughter is attacked by a dog begets a cycle of violence with unforeseen consequences. In several stories, teenage protagonists and young men serving in Vietnam suddenly experience the instinct of self preservation; they and other characters learn to test the limits of their moral certitude. Wolff's characterizations are impeccable, his ear pitch-perfect and his eye unblinking yet compassionate. 30,000 first printing. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Having published two fine memoirs, This Boy's Life and In Pharoah's Army, Wolff returns to the arena where he first earned literary fame: the short story. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A surprisingly uneven assemblage that, nevertheless, hits several astonishing highs. These 14 tales in Wolff's third collection (Back in the World, 1985; In the Garden of the North American Martyrs, 1981) deal variously with combative family relationships, the sources of violence and neurosis lying just beneath suburban and quotidian surfaces, and memories of the war in Vietnam (e.g., ``Casualty'' and ``The Other Miller'') that possess and transform those who served and suffered there. Wolff is at his weakest when his stories seem too nakedly personal (as in ``Powder'' and ``Firelight''), or when they're too clearly the products of controlling ideas--such as the unbelievable tale ``A Bullet in the Brain,'' in which a vitriolic book-reviewer can't help heckling the bank robber who's holding him at gunpoint, and is shot to death. Forget these stories, but do not miss: ``Flyboys,'' a portrayal of unstable teenage friendship in which Wolff brilliantly evokes the controlled emotions of a boy who resists being pulled into the orbit of a suffering family; ``Mortals,'' a snaky, surprising piece about a composer of newspaper obituaries who's fired when he fails to check on a reported death, and undergoes a strange encounter with the man whom he had, as it were, pronounced dead; ``Smorgasbord,'' a charming comedy involving horny prep-school students, the alluring stepmother of a dictator's son, and the process of shedding youth's romantic illusions; and especially ``The Chain,'' which opens with a terrifyingly vivid description of a man rescuing his small daughter from a vicious dog, then slowly, deftly traces the vengeful ``chain'' of violent acts that result from his reluctant complicity in a plot to punish the dog's callous owners. This tale is a dazzler, plotted with really remarkable ingenuity. Understatement, irony, and surprising juxtapositions are the key ingredients of these generally accomplished and resonant fictions--the best of which are certainly among the most accomplished being written in our time. (First printing of 30,000)

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.