The uncollected stories of Allan Gurganus

Allan Gurganus, 1947-

Book - 2021

"From one of "the best writers of our time" (Ann Patchett) comes a sparkling volume of previously uncollected short stories. For over three decades, Allan Gurganus has been heralded by readers and critics alike as "the most technically gifted and morally responsive writer of his generation" (John Cheever). Now, the beloved North Carolina author of such classics as Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All and White People has collected ten of his most powerful short stories-all of which have never appeared in a book and some of which have never before been published-into a volume that affirms his place as a quintessential Southern writer. In his characteristic style, Gurganus limns remarkable vignettes with unforget...table characters, such as Esther, the grammar school librarian who develops a relationship with a snake farmer in My Heart is a Snake Farmer, and the narrator of A Fool for Christmas, Vernon Ricketts, who is manager of Fin, Fur and Fun: "Third-busiest pet store in eastern North Carolina, so they tell me." Replete with descriptive prose that would remind one of none other than Melville, Uncollected Stories" celebrates one of the South's most iconic living authors and promises to create a new generation of Allan Gurganus readers for years to come"--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
New York, NY : Liveright Publishing Corporation, a division of W. W. Norton & Company [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Allan Gurganus, 1947- (author, -)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
239 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780871403780
  • The wish for a good young country doctor
  • The mortician confesses
  • He's at the office
  • Unassisted human flight
  • A fool for Christmas
  • Fetch
  • The deluxe $19.95 walking tour of Historic Falls (NC)-light lunch inclusive
  • Fourteen feet of water in my house
  • My heart is a snake farm.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Gurganus's vital collection (after Lost Souls) portrays small-town Americans, mostly oddballs and misfits, at moments of self-discovery as recounted in their own authentic voices. Several stories take place in fictional Falls, N.C., once called "the Athens of This Far into Eastern North Carolina," according to the tour guide in "The Deluxe $19.95 Walking Tour of Historic Falls (NC)." Small-town residents like Falls' know each other's secrets and relish the telling. In "The Mortician Confesses," a 60-year-old undertaker has sex with a corpse, and the man's sad story is colorfully told by the cop who caught him. In "Unassisted Human Flight," a reporter investigates a local legend of a man said to have flown almost a mile as a boy of eight. The characters can also be heroic, as when a 65-year-old widower rescues his neighbors during Hurricane Floyd in "Fourteen Feet of Water in my House," and an Ivy League doctor saves a Midwestern town from cholera in "The Wish for a Good Young Country Doctor," set during the 1850s. Among the greatest entries in this stellar work are "My Heart Is a Snake Farm," featuring a spinster whose life in a crumbling Florida motel brightens when a slippery charmer opens a reptile tourist attraction, and "He's at the Office," which details a son's efforts to help his 80-year-old father, a WWII veteran mentally stuck in the 1940s. Simultaneously funny and compassionate, literary and lowbrow, Gurganus's stories trawl the mysteries of the human heart and surface with wonderful results. Agent: Amanda Urban, ICM Partners. (Jan.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Gurganus made his name with his 1989 debut novel, Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All, but he boasts four story collections and has been publishing works in The New Yorker since 1974. The ten stories here include one recently excerpted in that magazine and concerns the tragic fate of a young doctor trying to deal with a cholera epidemic in an 1850 village. It was terrific.

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