From Publishers Weekly:
Twenty tales eyeball fragile childhoods, crumbling marriages, illness and despair, and many splendidly realize characterization, mood and voice in the space of a few pages. C. D. Godshalk's inner-city drug dealer yearns to be a prep-school student, while Patricia Henley's young narrator unwillingly forgives her mother, whose alcoholism scatters the narrator and her siblings into foster homes and institutions. Dennis McFarland's protagonist must watch his best buddy die of AIDS, and an older colleague's disintegration compels Richard Bausch's generally noncontemplative middle-aged priest to obsess about his own health. Joan Wickersham depicts a wife who bonds with her Brooklyn roommates to the exclusion of her out-of-town hubbie, and Elizabeth Tallent demonstrates how a happily remarried man can begrudge his ex-wife the company of their son. Set during the decline of the Hapsburg empire, Steven Millhauser's story of a Jewish illusionist who may have sold his soul to the devil for the gift of magic is foil to the volume's prevailing themes of modern angst. Slighter efforts by Madison Smartt Bell, Siri Hustvedt, Pamela Houston and Joy Williams also appear here, as does an introduction by Ford ( Rock Springs ) who explains his choice of two stories each by Bausch and Alice Munro and six from the New Yorker.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
For whatever reason, co-editor Ford claims he made no effort to balance the number of male authors against female or stories from small magazines against those from larger ones or "to include some percentage of gays or Chicanos or African Americans or Jews." The result is predictable: most of these authors are celebrities, and of the 20 stories, six are from The New Yorker alone. Overall, one wishes there had been more of the generous goofball spirit of Padgett Powell's "Typical," which is about a deadbeat who keeps his girlfriends' numbers on candy wrappers on the floor of his truck. ("One flies out, so what? More candy, more wrappers at the store.") There is nothing wrong with this collection, just nothing especially wild or exciting or different about it.
- David Kirby, Florida State Univ., Tallahassee
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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