PRO CONNECT
Robert Oldshue was raised in a suburb of Rochester N.Y., attended Williams College and then went to Case Western Reserve University Medical School. He did his residency training at The Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital in Medicine and Pediatrics and is board certified in both. He has lived in Boston since the early 90s. He cares for adults, children and families 5 days a week at the community health center around the corner from his house. He is an Instructor at Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Oldshue began writing fiction when he completed his residency in 1990. After 12 years he published his first story in The Bellevue Literary Review. In 2005 he obtained an MFA from Warren Wilson College. His first collection of stories was awarded the Iowa Short Fiction Award in 2016. His work has also appeared in The Gettysburg Review, Ars Medica and New England Review. He is married and has two children.
“Oldshue writes a loose, relaxed prose, that of an unhurried natural storyteller with a wry affection for many of his characters and a wide range of human interest.”
– Kirkus Reviews
The characters in this debut story collection confront minor crises and sudden shocks, the sort of narrative spectrum one might expect from an author who's also a medical doctor.
The elderly upstate New York couple hit by bad weather in the title story are also facing a neighborhood nearly emptied of its “first families,” a fact brought jarringly home when they crash into a car driven by one of the last (no one is hurt). Threats and loss recur in “Fergus B. Fergus” when a boy caring for a vacationing neighbor’s cats feels the “heart-pounding” terrors of a vacant house at night and then another sort of anxiety when one cat disappears on his watch. These two stories, which touch on people of the same rural New York community, and another concerning a troubled pregnancy and a Home Depot shopping trip, all bring to mind familiar Richard Russo territory. Oldshue also wields a dry humor that is especially effective in a story about an elderly woman disappearing from her nursing home. But Oldshue is better when he’s a bit unconventional. The psychiatrist in the long, meandering “Mass Mental” finds that a from-the-hip analysis for a couple he’s seeing may have caused the husband to murder his wife. An elderly Lithuanian relative whose wartime prison experience furnishes a project for a girl’s bat mitzvah offers an unusual angle on the Holocaust. A story about a gay male prostitute in 1978 and a confused married man ends with an unexplained death and a wife facing the new disease called AIDS.
Oldshue writes a loose, relaxed prose, that of an unhurried natural storyteller with a wry affection for many of his characters and a wide range of human interest.
Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-60938-451-7
Page count: 140pp
Publisher: Univ. of Iowa
Review Posted Online: July 31, 2016
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2016
Day job
Family Doctor
Hometown
Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
NOVEMBER STORM : Iowa Short Fiction Award, 2016
NOVEMBER STORM : Publishers Weekly Star, 2016
NOVEMBER STORM : Kirkus Star
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