In the Country of the Young
Stories
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
“An important and rewarding collection.” —Houston Chronicle
The short stories from In the Country of the Young feature characters struggling to find hope and connection—or just escape—through art, work, and love. The title story, a moving account of an angst-ridden seventeen-year-old nearly overwhelmed by his family’s aspirations for him, is a paean to the brief moment when the promise of youth and selfhood are untarnished by the disenchantments of life. In “Foxx Hunting,” a widower travels to LA to find a porn actress, though the movie he saw her in was shot decades earlier. “Lunch with Gottlieb” captures a young man of ambition hunting for the legendary advertising genius Gottlieb, lost in the jungles of business lunch.
Garnering comparisons to the work of Bernard Malamud and Saul Bellow, the stories of In the Country of the Young are written with the rare empathy and skill of a short fiction master.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
From a business lunch at a New York restaurant to a tourist's experience at a French market, from the beginning of an affair in an Italian villa to the end of a romance near a Kansas prison, Stern's 11 stories form a kaleidoscope of hope that gradually changes into patterns of disillusion and disappointment. The expertly structured, artfully detailed tales follow artists and exiles, lovers and parents, upstarts and retirees, as they seek escape from the ordinary in music, art, relationships and work. A University of Virginia graduate spends his first day in New York having lunch at the Palm restaurant in "Lunch with Gottlieb," discovering the web of compromise that makes up an advertising career. The coyly titled "Foxx Hunting" chronicles a middle-aged widower's pilgrimage to Los Angeles to find an actress from a porn film made decades ago. The son of a Jewish immigrant fears following in his father's forgetful footsteps in "Apraxia," one of several stories where Jewish imagery places Stern in the tradition of Bellow, Malamud and Roth. Like their heroes, Stern's fictions are capable of extraordinary about-faces. The award-winning author (Twice Told Tales; One Day's Perfect Weather; etc.) enriches his stories with cultural references and a profound sense of decency. In two tales about reluctant mentors, Stern celebrates art while making fun of the human process of creating it. The title story, the collection's longest and most detailed, is a coming-of-age tale of a music prodigy learning about love and life while preparing for an audition. Like other Stern heroes, the 17-year old acquires a gentle sadness, not bitterness, as he succumbs to the law of diminishing expectations. Blurbs from Elie Wiesel and Edward Albee attest to the collection's literary credentials.