1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Gay, Roxane
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Gay, Roxane Checked In
1st Floor FICTION/Gay, Roxane Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
[Phoenix] Or. : Artistically Declined Press c2011.
Language
English
Main Author
Roxane Gay (-)
Edition
1st ed
Item Description
Short stories.
Statement of responsibility from cover.
Physical Description
122 p. ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780802128263
9781450776714
  • Motherfuckers
  • About my father's accent
  • Voodoo child
  • There is no "E" in zombi, which means there can be no you or we
  • Things I know about fairy tales
  • You never know how the waters ran so cruel so deep
  • Cheap, fast, filling
  • In the manner of water or light
  • Lacrimosa
  • The harder they come
  • All things being relative
  • Gracias, Nicaragua y lo sentimos
  • The dirt we do not eat
  • What you need to know about a Haitian woman
  • A cool dry place.
Review by Booklist Review

Gay's parents were born in Haiti, the country that the characters in these 15 stories live in, visit, or leave and consider with the pride that exists especially for one's homeland. Many stories hold highly dimensioned characters and unforgettable moments in under a few pages, such as when a boy, a recent immigrant to the U.S., is teased for his body odor and reaps his own revenge. Sweet on the Tongue introduces a woman, known for her strong will, who recounts her husband's patient wooing followed by her brutal abduction from their honeymoon, calling to mind Mirelle, the captured heroine of Gay's ferocious thriller, An Untamed State (2014). In In the Manner of Water or Light, a woman conceived during Trujillo's murderous massacre of Haitians can't escape the smell of blood; when the first doctor to finally try to help her is a fellow Haitian in the U.S., she marries him. Dismantling the glib misconceptions of her complex ancestral home, Gay cuts and thrills. Readers will find her powerful first book difficult to put down. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: This rerelease of Gay's first collection, originally published by a small press in 2011, will be brand new to most readers and follows hot on the heels of the success of her second collection, Difficult Women, and memoir, Hunger, Booklist's 2017 Top of the List Nonfiction title.--Bostrom, Annie Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A set of brief, tart stories mostly set amid the Haitian-American community and circling around themes of violation, abuse, and heartbreak.This debut collection was first published by a small press in 2011, before Gay became a household name as a fiction writer, essayist, and memoirist (Hunger, 2017, etc.). Republished with two new stories in 2018, much of it reads like a rehearsal for her more ambitious work, though it's worth exploring in itself for Gay's sharp-elbowed flash fiction. One of the new stories, "Sweet on the Tongue," echoes the plot of her debut novel, An Untamed State: A woman visiting her native Haiti is abducted and raped, beyond the help of her wealthy husband, and the shorter version emphasizes how difficult it is to articulate an assault in its immediate aftermath. The tension is equally dramatic in the closing "A Cool, Dry Place," in which a Haitian couple plans to make a dangerous boat trek to Miami, struggling to decode both the mythology of America and their own difficult relationship. Usually, though, the stories are brief and intimate: There's a lesbian relationship in "Of Ghosts and Shadows" ("We are the women people ignore because two women loving each other is an American thing"); American tourists sexually fetishize Haitian women in "The Harder They Come"; and a new arrival to America is taunted in the schoolyard in the opening "Motherfuckers." This book set the tone that still characterizes much of Gay's writing: clean, unaffected, allowing the (often furious) emotions to rise naturally out of calm, declarative sentences. That gives her briefest stories a punch even when they come in at two pages or fewer, sketching out the challenges of assimilation in terms of accents, meals, or "What You Need to Know About a Haitian Woman."Gay has addressed these subjects with more complexity since, but this debut amply contains the righteous energy that drives all her work. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.