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THE BEST AMERICAN SHORT STORIES 1979

The favorites finish first this time out: Bellow's roistering "A Silver Dish," Barthelme's "The New Music," a section from Malamud's Dubin's Lives, Styron's "Shadrach," and Singer's "A Party in Miami Beach." Also worthy: Rosellen Brown's good but too self-registering "The Wedding Week"; Lynn Sharon Schwartz's slightly brittle "Plaisir D'Amour"; Silvia Tennenbaums's well-sustained but curiously unmoving "A Lingering Death"; and Herbert Wilner's vividly clinical but sentimental "The Quarterback Speaks to His God." The rest are hardly even in the running: a posthumous, not very good story by Flannery O'Connor, and efforts by Scan Virgo, Kaatje Hurlbut, Rolf Yngve, Peter LaSalle, Lyn Coffin, Ruth McLaughlin, Robley Wilson Jr., Mary Hedin, Annette Sanford, Paul Bowles, Jean Thompson, Maxine Kumin, Louis D. Rubin, and Jayne Anne Phillips. And, though Oates' introduction offers this year's anthology as a tribute to the little-known and small-press-published stories, they are generally the weakest of the lot. The exception — and the highlight of the collection — is alice Munro's "Spelling," little-mag-published and stunning, one of Munro's alert, heart-crumbling Flo and Rose stories (see The Beggar Maid, p. 882), bare and bristly and sadly comic. A largely drab round-up, then, with the few, best stories utterly overshadowing the lesser efforts.

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 1979

ISBN: 0395277698

Page Count: 386

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

Review Posted Online: Oct. 2, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1979

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A GOOD MAN IS HARD TO FIND AND OTHER STORIES

This collection of short stories by the southerner whose first novel Wise Blood appeared in 1952 is more likely to attract readers who want to follow Miss O'Connor's writing progress rather than those who favor fiction in this form. Miss O'Connor is not really a short story writer. She seems to need more space to develop her characters and to point this up- her best story is the longest in the book, The Displaced Person. In this, a southern farm is seen as a community of uprooted people- all fighting for security in their own ways, and a kind of understanding and sympathy is developed for each with tragic success. The River, the ironic fragment- A Stroke of Good Fortune- and A Circle in the Fire (second prize in Doubleday's Prize Stories 1955 collection) are among the best here, while some- including the title story- are the skimpiest of sketches, and again still others do not have room enough to develop beyond what it seems was in the author's mind. Many of these have appeared in the Kenyor Review. Harper's Bazaar, and the New Yorker, and will cater to eclectic tastes.

Pub Date: June 3, 1995

ISBN: 0151365040

Page Count: 264

Publisher: Harcourt, Brace & World

Review Posted Online: Oct. 2, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 1955

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FINGERSMITH

Nobody writing today surpasses the precocious Waters’s virtuosic handling of narrative complexity and thickly textured...

Imagine a university-educated lesbian Charles Dickens with a similarly keen eye for mendacity and melodrama, and you’ll have some idea of the pleasures lurking in Waters’s impudent revisionist historicals: Tipping the Velvet (1999), Affinity (2000), and now this richly woven tale of duplicity, passion, and lots of other good stuff.

It begins as the narrative of 17-year-old Susan Trinder, an orphan resident of the criminal domicile run by Hogarthian Grace Sucksby, a Fagin-like “farmer” of discarded infants and den-mother to an extended family of “fingersmiths” (i.e., pickpockets) and assorted confidence-persons. One of the latter, Richard Rivers (a.k.a. “Gentleman”), engages Susan in an elaborate plot to fleece wealthy old Mr. Lilly, a connoisseur of rare books—as lady’s maid “Susan Smith” to Lilly’s niece and ward Maude, a “simple, natural” innocent who will be married off to “Mr. Rivers,” then disposed of in a madhouse, while the conspirators share her wealth. Maidservant and mistress grow unexpectedly close, until Gentleman’s real plan—a surprise no reader will see coming—leads to a retelling of events we’ve just witnessed, from a second viewpoint—which reveals the truth about Mr. Lilly’s bibliomania, and discloses to a second heroine that “Your life was not the life that you were meant to live.” (Misdirections and reversals are essential components of Waters’s brilliant plot, which must not be given away.) Further intrigues, escapes, and revelations climax when Susan (who has resumed her place as narrator) returns from her bizarre ordeal to Mrs. Sucksby’s welcoming den of iniquity, and a final twist of the knife precipitates another crime and its punishment, astonishing discoveries about both Maude and Susan (among others), and a muted reconciliation scene that ingeniously reshapes the conclusion of Dickens’s Great Expectations.

Nobody writing today surpasses the precocious Waters’s virtuosic handling of narrative complexity and thickly textured period detail. This is a marvelous novel.

Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2002

ISBN: 1-57322-203-8

Page Count: 493

Publisher: Riverhead

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2001

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