1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is a vastly-important and underrated writer., October 22, 2006
This review is from: Beautiful Changes (Hardcover)
If you've ever been truly alone and/or experienced the decay of a relationship, the novella and the accompanying stories of "The Beautiful Changes" may be a bit difficult to read. But that is one the challenges of life, yes? McCloskey not only meets this challenge head on, she embellishes and burnishes many of the universally critical moments of life. Not huge, burn-down-the-house moments, but small and simple ones. Ones that genuinely teach and inform.
As a masterful follow-up to her first collection of stories ("Solomon's Seal") real growth and complexity are evident here. To examine her writing from a technical standpoint is a joy - but that's not why we read. No, we read for the journey, for the catharsis, for the processes of self examination which inevitably occur - and for the sheer enjoyment of it all.
We are expertly led on this trip by Ms. McCloskey. What we are given, as readers, is an incisive look at family, recovery, love and yearning - with good bits of levity and sweetness laced throughout. She presents us with truly clever landscapes and characters - wry and full of surprises but tempered by the bittersweet. The view here is from the inside - as we all truly live - focusing and interpreting through our own prisms and biases and confusions. Therefore there's no real Big Bang. Only small ones that cumulatively build throughout each piece.
The prose here is world-class - certainly this is one of the most underrated and underexposed writers of our generation. Her abilities in tapping the topical and the sentimental - plus a real ability to write men - are displayed remarkably in this collection.
If you are a reader of Flannery O'Connor, it is safe to say that you've found a kindered spirit in Molly McCloskey, albeit from a less Catholic spiritual basis. Possessing a talent such as this certainly must prove tempting, in that a real challenge is to reign in the prose and avoid the overly florid. McCloskey accomplishes this in spades, showing restraint, yet managing to truly spread her wings. This is most appreciated.
I heartily recommend this collection and hope that readers will continue to spread the word about this important writer.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No