Until We Have Faces
Stories
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- 16,99 €
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- 16,99 €
Publisher Description
"The hope of love burns at the center of this remarkable collection.” —Melissa Pritchard, award-winning author of A Solemn Pleasure
In a style reminiscent of John Cheever and Alice Munro, Michael Nye's second collection of stories, Until We Have Faces, contends with transfixing themes: marital and familial estrangement, ways of trespass, the intractable mysteries and frights of modern life, the uncertainty of knowledge and truth, the gulfs between people and the technology we use, the frailty of our economic lives. Yet hope remains amongst these struggles.
With his consummate skill, penetrating wit, and unfailing emotional generosity on full display in this fine new collection, award-winning storyteller Michael Nye brings together nine indelible short stories to provide an intimate look into the flawed nature of humanity, the universal questions of modern life, and the unending persistence of love amidst it all.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Set in the contemporary Midwest and revisiting themes from Nye's debut novel, All the Castles Burned, this stoic, grim collection follows men who process emotions through violence, anger, and alcohol and find describing their feelings the "hardest thing to do." These men are former athletes and members of the military, many of whom have fallen from their glory days and have been relegated to demoralizing jobs. In "Who Are You Wearing?" a man gets a gig waving signs at cars and wearing a bumble bee costume for the Halloween Superstore; and in "The Good Shepherd," a man runs a farm that processes shelter dogs as a poultry substitute. A general sadness permeates as the characters wallow in loneliness; when one recognizes that "we all reek of desperation," he could be speaking for all of the stories' protagonists. But much of this desperation is born of their own doing, informed and complicated by their expectations that men remain strong and women steady. Despite the moping, drinking, and brawls, there's hope here that happiness will not remain a "ridiculous, arrogant idea" for these men if only they can reconsider what happy means. Fans of Nye's work will welcome this.