![From the Place in the Valley Deep in the Forest](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
![From the Place in the Valley Deep in the Forest](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
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From the Place in the Valley Deep in the Forest
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- 9,49 €
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- 9,49 €
Descrizione dell’editore
The stories and characters in this diverse collection of stories from the acclaimed novelist Mitch Cullin provide a fascinating gloss on events that have taken place in the second half of the 20th century. They begin at a remote Japanese beach house and end on an unnamed Alaskan island. These are stories about isolation, remembrances of past experiences, and the sometimes inaccurate nature of memory. Cullin's stories examine individuals who have survived momentous, often horrific, social upheavals-where relationships and common day-to-day life are suddenly shaken by unforeseen circumstances. `From the Place in the Valley Deep in the Forest' is a collection that deftly suggests we are all emigrants from personal histories we recall only fleetingly-moments which draw us back, but, as we imagine them, seem increasingly difficult to grasp. These polished and graceful stories are further evidence of the kind of work that makes Cullin one of our best young writers. "If something of the experimentalist shows in Cullin's novels, his stories are old-fashioned in the best sense, reporting slices of life as the characters experience them in a language that is economical yet richly evocative because of its precision."-Booklist
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Texas is a big place, as everyone knows, though not big enough to fully contain Cullin's literary imagination. After three gritty novels set in the vast, empty Texas countryside (Whompyjawed; Branches; Tideland), Cullin ranges across the globe in this thoughtful collection of stories. In the title story, Marie and Al, married Vietnam War veterans, return to Vietnam with their teenage son for an ill-conceived bicycle tour. Though ostensibly tourists, they can't help grappling with wartime memories. Marie, a Japanese-American who was a nurse during the war, recalls "those few boys refusing my aid because, to them, I was just another slant-eye, a gook." "History is Dead" moves across the border to Cambodia for a visit to the infamous killing fields and Pol Pot's re-education campaign. "Wormwood" deals with another type of disaster as it follows a boy's life in the aftermath of the Chernobyl meltdown. Though rich in detail (in "Wormwood," Soviet authorities order everyone in the fallout zone to wash their hair), these stories read somewhat slowly. Cullin warms to his task when he returns to his old stomping-ground, Texas, for "Five Women in No Particular Order." The five smalltown friends of the title think they know everything about each other, joking over their weekly poker game, but driven by boredom or failed aspirations, some have begun to live risky, clandestine lives. "Sifting Through" and "Totem" both follow disaffected teenage boys as they seek redemption, or at least a sense of belonging. It's good to see Cullin continue to stretch his boundaries, as he did in the quirky Cosmology of Bing, though it's clear he's still most comfortable under the skies of Texas.