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At The Gates Of The Animal Kingdom: Stories Hardcover – March 10, 1990


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At The Gates Of The Animal Kingdom: Stories + Reasons to Live + Tumble Home: A Novella and Short Stories
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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 137 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1st edition (March 10, 1990)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0394571746
  • ISBN-13: 978-0394571744
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 4.9 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,002,311 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Here the very talented Hempel works in a hard-bitten, often mannered mode with material made familiar in her first book, Reasons to Live . The stories in her new collection follow people through crises and emergencies, from traffic accidents to mastectomies, as they take risks, waiting "for the moment that would snap me out of my seeming life" yet frequently "cut off from meaning and completion" in the end. A housewife in "Under No Moon" is mysteriously bent on seeing a comet, but in a minor comedy of errors fails to do so. The earnest and foolish young mother in "The Center" attempts to sponsor a destitute child, all the while behaving with the self-serving zeal of a super-yuppie consumer. In "The Harvest," one of the strongest stories, a narrator reconstructs, then deconstructs, the events leading up to and following a motorcycle injury that leaves a lasting psychological wound. Mordant and unsentimental, Hempel works with a sharp wit that sometimes shaves away too ruthlessly at characters, limiting the depth of her sympathy--and ours.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

A book of short stories always brings with it the possibility of intriguing titles, and there are several grabbers in this collec tion. In "The Most Girl Part of You," one watches Big Guy, a kind of charming lug who has an obsession with ice water, as he plays the mating game with the narra tor. "And Lead Us Not into Penn Sta tion" is a testament to the insensitivity, lack of compassion, and passive accep tance of others' suffering that seems to permeate much of modern urban life. "The Rest of God" leaves the reader caught in the undertow of emotion at a beach picnic as a husband and wife are swept together briefly by a cosmic surge. Other titles include "The Day I Had Ev erything," "Tom-Rock Through the Eels," and "In the Animal Shelter." Hem pel handles her themes of disorientation, dissolution, and deliverance well. She writes in a conversational style that dis plays both wit and a wry intelligence. This collection would fit nicely with other works of contemporary fiction.
-Francis Poole, Kentucky Wesleyan Coll., Owensboro
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
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See all 9 customer reviews
Amy Hempel's collection of short stories in this book is marvelous.
gail cloutier
They say that Raymond Carver is the master of minimalism in the short story genre but Hempel's work is definitely on par.
Lenell E. Kelley
It's almost too easy to start out this review with a metaphor based on a line from a story in this book.
Mr. Richard K. Weems

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

9 of 11 people found the following review helpful By A Customer on June 6, 1997
Format: Paperback
One night I convinced myself that I had once attempted to crack my teeth by drinking coffee immediately after ice water. Later I realized that Jack "Big Guy" Fitch from Amy Hempel's "The Most Girl Part of You," had been the tooth-cracker, not me. When first reading At The Gates of the Animal Kingdom the stories swam swiftly by like the fish in the Roundabout at the Aquarium in the story of the same name; they were a quick read. Immediately afterward I thought little about them. After distancing myself
from them with hours and days they eerily began to creep back into my life--sentence by
sentence, one by one. I started to read them again.
What makes Hempel's stories so unearthing is their lack of gravity. I don't mean
this in a flippant sense. Some of the stories are quite unsettling, but they float into your
consciousness rather than tearing into it with a hoe and shovel. Initially I attributed their
affect to the events and subjects of the stories; almost all of them deal with subjects
common to contemporary young women; however, Hempel's prose seduced me for a
different reason.
These stories lack perfection, but not in a derogatory sense. Hempel's stories do
not take on the air of being this brick wall of material. The stories wander and spin; they
were personal. For example in "The Center" Hempel spends the first page and a half
writing about "my friend Deborah" who "for the price of a cup of coffee a day" had
"adopted a child." Then unexpectedly she begins to talk about a dog named Pal: "I was
thinking about Pal.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful By Lenell E. Kelley on March 27, 2004
Format: Paperback
This book is one of my favorite collections of short stories. They say that Raymond Carver is the master of minimalism in the short story genre but Hempel's work is definitely on par. Each story is a look at life from a different angle. She takes the moments and events that we simply experience without a second thought or glance and turns them so that they reveal something extraordinary. She is not verbose - so if you feel you can't enjoy a story without heavy description and don't have the desire/patience to think about the weight of small events or it overwhelms you to realize that even the subtleties of life have a momentum of their own - you won't appreciate this. There is also a lot that is inferred but not said. She chooses her words very carefully - just as a poet one line can resonate. In the Animal Shelter is only 4 short paragraphs but one of the most powerful in this collection. I discovered her writing as an undergraduate in the early 90's and I still reach for her books and find something new to enjoy.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful By gail cloutier on May 22, 2000
Format: Hardcover
Amy Hempel's collection of short stories in this book is marvelous. At first glance I was afraid that the animal theme would become old I soon realized that as with all of her writings I should not have given in to such assumptions. The stories in this collection are mostly quite short, some only a page, but they are not vingettes or prose poems-- each page is as full as any longer story. The stories range from disturbing and sad to winsome and heart warming, but as with Amy Hempel's other works she always touches both your mind and your heart.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful By Mr. Richard K. Weems on September 3, 2006
Format: Paperback
It's almost too easy to start out this review with a metaphor based on a line from a story in this book. Never mind that it's a line from the best story in here ("The Harvest") and that it seems ample: "I leave a lot out when I tell the truth." This seems too easy a start, and it doesn't feel all that original. I'd only be repeating an idea some other reviewer must have come up with, an idea that probably seemed cute at the time, and since I find most review writing stale and tedious, I'd prefer to take a different route.

So let's go with a reaction that feels more individuated: I read this book four times before I could even hope to talk about it, half of those readings accomplished in one train ride from Philadelphia to New York City (not all that long an expanse, so you can imagine my intensity, for I am not that quick a reader). Aside from the aforementioned quotation that I had hoped not to aforemention, I doubt I could successfully pull out many more lines from this collection of stories and have them sing out of context the way they do in the deep fray of reading.

Hempel's work thrives inside its context. Sentences and words and ideas and syllables build upon each other--such as in a scene where slicing mosquito bites becomes exquisite foreplay--creating moments of synergy between reader and text that mere description or analysis can not hope to recapture. Perhaps my personal reactions to this work stem from my recognition that reading Hempel makes me mindful of my own aesthetics as an artist--makes me put my own demands as a reader to the fore. This is very active, very front-brain reading, tinged with exquisite, visceral pleasure-oddities, base humor, and deep sadness.
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