Notes from the Fog
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- ¥1,800
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- ¥1,800
発行者による作品情報
'I wake up and I have to make the right choice,' he said.
Master-stylist Ben Marcus returns with a wonder-cabinet of brain-rearranging stories. From the horrifyingly strange to the deeply touching, each story is a literary masterclass unlikely to leave the reader unchanged.
From parent/child relationships thrown agonisingly off kilter, to intensely moving scenarios of dependence and emotional crisis; from left-alone bodies to new scientific frontiers, Ben Marcus is the great chronicler of the contemporary uncanny and the peculiar future.
Piece by piece, he takes us apart.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Marcus's refined and uncompromising third story collection (following Leaving the Sea), dissects the American experience through language that is always precise, unexpected, and alive. In the tone-setting first story, "Cold Little Bird," a 10-year-old boy's sudden aversion to affection threatens to dismantle his parents' marriage. Two married architects attempt to build a potentially unbuildable memorial for a terrorist attack in the excellent "Blueprints for St. Louis," while a mother leaves her own family to care for the husband and sons of her recently deceased sister in "The Boys." The somewhat straightforward plots of these stories cede center stage to the brutal strangeness and ominous mood of Marcus's language, which is best expressed in the collection's centerpiece, "A Suicide of Trees," a nightmarish tale of a middle-aged man searching for his missing father. Throughout, each story features moments of considered, lacerating prose ("A husband, these days, is a bag of need with a dank wet hole in its bottom. The sheer opposite of a go bag.") threaded together by sentences that, like a marionette's strings, bring the world to full, expansive life. This is a bracing, forceful collection.