Concerning the future of souls 99 Stories of Azrael

Joy Williams, 1944-

Book - 2024

"Concerning the Future of Souls balances the extraordinary and the humble, the bizarre and the beatific, as Azrael-transporter of souls and the most troubled and thoughtful of the angels-confronts the holy impossibility of his task, his uneasy relationship with Death, and his friendship with the Devil. Over the course of these ninety-nine illuminations, a collection of connected and disparate beings--ranging from ordinary folk to grand, known figures such as Jung, Nietzsche, Pythagoras, Bach, and Rilke; to mountains, oceans, dogs, birds, whales, horses, butterflies, a sixty-year-old tortoise, and a chimp named Washoe--experience the varying fate of the soul as each encounters the darkness of transcendence in this era of extinction. A b...rilliant crash course in philosophy, religion, literature, and culture, Concerning the Future of Souls is an absolution and an indictment, sorrowful and ecstatic."--

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FICTION/Williams Joy
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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Williams Joy (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 6, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Short stories
Published
Portland, Oregon : Tin House 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Joy Williams, 1944- (author)
Edition
First US edition
Physical Description
160 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781959030591
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Azrael is the angel who transports the soul after death. He has four thousand wings to help him in this ceaseless task and a thousand eyes. The Devil, "with his good strong heart," is Azrael's sparring partner and friend, and their thorny dialogues appear in rotation among brain-revving vignettes, parables, meditations, riddles, and laments. The always acute and unsettling Williams follows her fifth novel, Harrow (2021), with a collection in the mode of her Ninety-Nine Stories of God (2016). These 99 stories of Azrael and his increasingly sorrowful labors as species die out on a poisoned and abused Earth feature poets, philosophers, regular people, and various animals all in predicaments baffling, sad, and catastrophic. While Azrael cannot keep up with "the sheer precipitous magnitude of it all," the Devil has less to do all the time: "Everything he stood for was running along on its own." As the Devil's taunts challenge Azrael's faith, the angel's despair cues us to what's at stake on our pillaged, war-torn planet. William's erudite, consummately concentrated stories range from provocative to desolating to (mercifully) funny.

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

Williams follows up Ninety-Nine Stories of God with another resonant collection of 99 vignettes, this time centered on themes of environmental destruction and mortality. The entries--none longer than two pages and some as short as a single word--showcase Williams's sly wit. In one, a woman's entire life is traced through the trees she's planted (an oak is "sheared and lopped to an unsurvivable degree" due to an "increase in broadband demand"). In another, a woman recalls how her husband proposed to her in skywriting, and how "the beginning was disappearing even before the end appeared." Elsewhere, Williams delves into the strange death of monk Thomas Merton, who was found with a short-circuited fan lying on his body; and zooms in on Vladimir Nabokov on his deathbed, distraught that he's no longer capable of stalking and extinguishing butterflies. Another entry depicts the day in 2021 when 1,400 dolphins were killed in the Faroe Islands. Interspersed throughout are brief episodes portraying the discomfort and fretfulness of Azrael, the angel of death, who is worried that "the mountains have been stripped of their holiness, the oceans of their mysteries." As with the previous volume, these pieces riddle the reader's mind with their exquisite enigmas. Williams continues to astonish. Agent: Amelia Atlas, CAA. (July)Correction: A previous version of this review incorrectly stated that the entries are untitled.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The angel of death, Washoe the chimp, and T.S. Eliot share the stage in Williams' enchanting collection of 99 short-short stories. "The older dog's death": This is one complete entry in Williams' lyrical set of 99 stories about death, its number nicely echoing Dante's Divine Comedy. Dante turns up, to be sure. Williams' tales, though, more often concern Azrael, the archangel who escorts souls to meet God, and the devil, with whom Azrael has some pointed exchanges: "Death and I are not the same," Azrael insists, to which the devil replies, "A difference without distinction." On occasion they agree--for instance, that crows and ravens "are marvelous," belonging to the same genus just as, by the devil's calculus, do spirit and soul. More often, the devil thwarts Azrael, an innocently guileless psychopomp who asks in all seriousness, remembering the song "Ghost Riders in the Sky," whether the devil's "stupendous and tireless herd were entirely red...and what did yippie i oh yippie i ay mean anyway?" Even when the two aren't present in Williams' glimmering stories, they're close by as her characters maneuver toward death, one woman expressing the wish to be buried with her horse, and Vladimir Nabokov approaching the end with tears in his eyes in the knowledge that he'll no longer be able to chase butterflies. The sensitive reader will likely come away from Williams' little book having shed a few tears, too, sharing with the writer the sad realization that the world is coming to an end in careless human hands, their victims such blameless creatures as snakes, whose "existence underground kept the earth from falling apart," and manatees. Happily, in Williams' telling, the souls of animals go to greet God, too, thanks to Azrael's devoted service. Elegantly poetic--and often archly funny--meditations on death by a superb writer. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.