In brief Short takes on the personal

Book - 1999

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814.5408/In
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 814.5408/In Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : W.W. Norton 1999.
Language
English
Other Authors
Judith Kitchen (-), Mary Paumier Jones
Physical Description
288 pages
ISBN
9780393319071
  • At Herring Cove / Mary Oliver
  • The host / William Heyen
  • Crabs dig holes according to the size of their shells / James Alan McPherson
  • Bobcats / James Kilgo
  • The Indian dog / N. Scott Momaday
  • Desire / David Shields
  • One afternoon / John Rosenthal
  • Frank Sinatra's gum / Kelly Simon
  • Considering the lilies / Rebecca McClanahan
  • On seat belts, coacaine addiction, and the germ theory of disease / Diana Hume George
  • The end of summer / Kimberly Gorall
  • Fallout / Dawn Marano
  • Deep in the art of Texas / Robert Shapard
  • Prison man considers Turkey / John Edwards
  • The left-handed Sweeney and vacation / Robert O'Connor
  • From On The Street / Vivian Gornick
  • Stuck with strangers / Castle Freeman, Jr.
  • Western Union / Michael Blumenthal
  • 107 Miles west of Fargo / W. Scott Olsen
  • Sink or swim / Annick Smith
  • January 13 / Rick Bass
  • Calving heifers in a March blizzard / Ann Daum
  • Man of letters / Guy Lebeda
  • The deck / Yusef Komunyakaa
  • From Dirt Roads / Mary Clearman Blew
  • Twigs / R.H. Herzog
  • Artifacts / Brenda Miller
  • Two hearts / Brian Doyle
  • Thread / Stuart Dybek
  • Storm warnings / Sheyene Foster
  • This is your day / Jane Guilbault
  • The weather of distance / M.J. Iuppa
  • The brilliance / James Salter
  • Artifacts of memory / Josephine Jacobsen.
  • Low tide at four / Hariet Doerr
  • Rhapsody in green / Marjorie Sandor
  • Late July, 4:40 a.m. / Reg Saner
  • Gulleywasher / Jonathan Raban
  • Good workers / John T. Price
  • One liar's beginnings / Brady Udall
  • From The Bend For Home / Dermot Healy
  • Accident, June 1948 / Seamus Deane
  • From Angela's ashes / Frank McCourt
  • Remembering, I was not there / Anne Panning
  • Very narrow / Anne Carson
  • Adjustments / Jeanne Brinkman Grinnan
  • Nearing 90 / William Maxwell
  • Dealing with the discovery of death inside an embassy in October of 1973, in Santiago de Chile / Ariel Dorfman
  • A missing star / Paul West
  • Parnassus / Albert Goldbarth
  • In between / Kinereth Gensler
  • A sense of water / William Kloefkorn
  • Fury and grace / Pattiann Rogers
  • Swimming with canoes / John McPhee
  • Train of thought / Bernard Cooper
  • Swan's way, 1998 / Steve Heller
  • Dream houses / Tenaya Darlington
  • Waking dreams / Edwidge Danticat
  • A sense of wonder / Dionisio D. Martinez
  • All over again / Verlyn Klinkenborg
  • Messages / Andre Dubus
  • e-mail / Janice Best
  • Infectious reading / Charles Baxter
  • Come eat / Patricia Hampl
  • Bread / Jane Brox
  • Clip from a winter diary / Kelly Cunnane
  • Missing / Celine Geary
  • At last, her laundry's done / Kathleen Norris
  • Asparagus / Kathleen Cain
  • Existing things / Cynthia Ozick
  • The McKenzie river / Kathleen Dean Moore
  • How to tell one bird from the next / Cecile Goding
  • Garden of envy / Jamaica Kincaid .
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Noting the proliferation of creative nonfiction pieces less than 2000 words longÄranging from "fragment to finished essay, anecdote to memoir, story, meditation, hypothesis"Äeditors Kitchen and Jones follow up their 1996 In Short with another collection of pithy and tantalizing pieces. Studded with contributions from such accomplished writers as Kathleen Norris, John McPhee, Jamaica Kincaid and Rick Bass, these 73 mostly original offerings include some excerpts from longer works. Often employing the techniques of fiction, the pieces are linked by themes of family or romantic love, place or philosophy, recurring motifs, even theories of writing. In "Low Tide at Four," Harriet Doerr muses about a day in August, 1939, when she "exerted the full force of [her] will, commanding the sun to hold back the wave long enough for [her] to paint and frame low tide." William Maxwell sees his "ninetieth birthday approaching out of the corner of one eye," as much a natural phenomenon as the sea, which brings both joy and anguish as he realizes he has "lost touch with the place that stories and novels come from." In "Waking Dreams," Edwidge Danticat compares her fictional characters with their sometimes real life inspirations, recognizing that "writers always betray someone at some point." Offering autobiographical revelations, flashes of insight and lots of good writing, this is a solid meal for readers on the fly. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

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

This refreshing and enjoyable collection of brief personal essays is a delight. Editors Kitchen and Jones have followed up In Short: A Collection of Brief Nonfiction (LJ 7/96) with a similar collection of essays in which a single voice conveys an individual experience. Many of the essays involve nature. Several authors of the New West are included: Rick Bass, Cynthia Ozick, Kathleen Norris, and Mary Clearman Blew. Other recognizable names include Frank McCourt, William Maxwell, John McPhee, Andre Dubus, and Edwidge Danticat. The quality of the writing is excellent. Diana Hume Georges On Seat Belts, Cocaine Addiction, and the Germ Theory is a humorous account of an overbearing mother and an allegedly promiscuous divorced daughter. Kelly Simons Frank Sinatras Gum tells about a teenager who, after chewing a piece of the crooners discarded gum, decides both the gum and the guy are unsugary. For the affordable price, this collection should be purchased by every libraryit is ideal for literature students and writing groups. [Editor Jones is an LJ reviewer.Ed.]Joyce Sparrow, Oldsmar Lib., St. Petersburg, FL (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

An anthology of sleek, mostly savvy, short bits of creative nonfiction that focus on the theme of the personal. One might justifiably feel that the trend toward such 'micro' essays panders to attention spans that have been eclipsed by television and the endless barrage of advertisements and sound-bytes which we now experience as normal. But, then again, there is something so delicious about a quick literary nugget that you can gulp down in those five or six minutes of transitional time between ``getting things done,'' which so often serves as our free time these days. The best of these shorts (there are 72 in the collection) represent the compression of a wide range of human emotion and experience into a single object'a sort of self-reflexive literary fetishization. N. Scott Momaday's ``The Indian Dog,'' for example, accesses fierceness of spirit and human longing with the description of a five-dollar dog that refuses to stay with his new master. Ariel Dorfman manages to evoke the multitude of complex emotions experienced by Argentinean refugees sheltering in their embassy during the military takeover in Chile with the image of a blanket thrown over the wall by an unseen person who is shot before he or she can climb to safety. David Shields condenses desire into the longing for a boy-scout belt; Kelly Simon resolves an encounter with fame by chewing a piece of gum left behind by Frank Sinatra. The new style of this short prose writing is perhaps best reflected by the degree to which pieces such as the chapter from Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes (in which he searches the pubs of Limerick for his drunken father), seem out of place. McCourt's conversational, narrative style seems to cheat the spirit of mosaic which characterizes many of the shorter shorts. Shorts are coming into their own as a literary genre resistance is futile!

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.