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BIRCH LANE PRESS PRESENTS AMERICAN FICTION

VOL. IV, THE BEST UNPUBLISHED SHORT STORIES BY EMERGING WRITERS

A tantalizing irony: to get to know what kind of short stories aren't being published in America these days, you can look between the covers of this book and find exactly 20 of the year's best stories that aren't—are?—being published. As explained by the project's editors, this is the sixth annual ``emerging writers'' volume, and the fourth since the publication became a Birch Lane series. Stories again include first-, second-, and third-prize winners (Clint McKown's ``Mule Collector''; Annie Dawid's ``The Settlement''; Joshua Sinel's ``The Summer After''). From among the 17 others, the editors clarify, ``Two deal with the Holocaust, one with the aftermath of Vietnam, two with black experience, three with the `redneck' or poverty- ridden part of the South.'' All of the pieces ``were submitted by `emerging writers,' which, as Tobias Wolff pointed out in last year's introduction, is `a loose category meant to encourage submissions by everyone not yet famous enough to enjoy the certainty of publication elsewhere.'' This year's guest editor and judge of the prize-winners was the recently deceased Wallace Stegner, whose introduction, serving also as guideline and primer to the art and practice of the short story, is crisply reasoned and scrupulously observed. Of the non-prize-winning stories in the volume, Stegner writes that ``Though some are more technically finished than others, all have the bright look of promise.''

Pub Date: July 1, 1993

ISBN: 1-55972-186-3

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Birch Lane Press

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 1993

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'SALEM'S LOT

A super-exorcism that leaves the taste of somebody else's blood in your mouth and what a bad taste it is. King presents us with the riddle of a small Maine town that has been deserted overnight. Where did all the down-Easters go? Matter of fact, they're still there but they only get up at sundown. . . for a warm drink. . . .Ben Mears, a novelist, returns to Salem's Lot (pop. 1319), the hometown he hasn't seen since he was four years old, where he falls for a young painter who admires his books (what happens to her shouldn't happen to a Martian). Odd things are manifested. Someone rents the ghastly old Marsten mansion, closed since a horrible double murder-suicide in 1939; a dog is found impaled on a spiked fence; a healthy boy dies of anemia in one week and his brother vanishes. Ben displays tremendous calm considering that you're left to face a corpse that sits up after an autopsy and sinks its fangs into the coroner's neck. . . . Vampirism, necrophilia, et dreadful alia rather overplayed by the author of Carrie (1974).

Pub Date: Oct. 17, 1975

ISBN: 0385007515

Page Count: 458

Publisher: Doubleday

Review Posted Online: Sept. 26, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1975

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A JOURNEY TO THE END OF THE MILLENNIUM

The fine Israeli writer Yehoshua (Open Heart, 1996, etc.) makes a lengthy journey into the year 999, the end of the first millennium. Indeed, it is the idea of a great journey that is the heart of the story here. Ben Attar, a Moroccan Jewish merchant has come a long distance to France to seek out his nephew and former partner Abulafia. Ben Attar, the nephew, and a third partner, the Muslim Abu Lutfi, had once done a lucrative business importing spices and treasures from the Atlas Mountains to eager buyers in medieval Europe. But now their partnership has been threatened by a complex series of events, with Abulafia married to a pious Jewish widow who objects vehemently to Ben Attar’s two wives. Accompanied by a Spanish rabbi, whose cleverness is belied by his seeming ineffectualness; the rabbi’s young son, Abu Lutfi; the two wives; a timorous black slave boy, and a crew of Arab sailors, the merchant has come to Europe to fight for his former partnership. The battle takes place in two makeshift courtrooms in the isolated Jewish communities of the French countryside, in scenes depicted with extraordinary vividness. Yehoshua tells this complex, densely layered story of love, sexuality, betrayal and “the twilight days, [when] faiths [are] sharpened in the join between one millennium and the next” in a richly allusive, languorous prose, full of lengthy, packed sentences, with clauses tumbling one after another. De Lange’s translation is sensitively nuanced and elegant, catching the strangely hypnotic rhythms of Yehoshua’s style. As the story draws toward its tragic conclusion—but not the one you might expect—the effect is moving, subtle, at once both cerebral and emotional. One of Yehoshua’s most fully realized works: a masterpiece.

Pub Date: Jan. 19, 1999

ISBN: 0-385-48882-3

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Doubleday

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 1998

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