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The Best Short Stories of William Kittredge [Paperback]

William Kittredge (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 1, 2003
“Kittredge paints with these colors: sky blue, night black, blood red. Nature has more—but none truer.”—The New York Times Book Review

"We were meat hunters. You spent money for shells, you brought home meat. I saw Teddy Spandau die on that account. Went off into open water chest deep, just trying to get some birds he shot. Cramped up and drowned. We hauled a boat down and fished him out that afternoon."
—from “The Waterfowl Tree”

A master storyteller and essayist, William Kittredge is best known for his unflinching vision of the hardscrabble landscape of the West and the people who survive and die in it. His stories are stripped down but bristle with life to offer a dusty, relentless landscape; the smell of freshly turned dirt; the blunt conversations about work that needs doing; and the rare, quiet moment of reflection that amounts to nothing less than poetry. This volume represents the best of Kittredge’s stories, available together in a handsome edition.

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The Best Short Stories of William Kittredge + Hole in the Sky: A Memoir (Vintage) + Who Owns the West?
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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Kittredge's memoirs of growing up on a cattle ranch in southeastern Oregon--Owning It All (1987) and Hole in the Sky (1992)--have become classics of western literature. His short fiction is lesser known, but this fine collection should help change that. The prose style is quintessentially western: no-nonsense declarative sentences, plainspoken, without artifice, yet expressing in their very simplicity the unspoken emotions that stand behind each syllable. Several of the stories, including "Be Careful What You Want," address themes familiar from the memoirs: disaffected children of wealthy western landowners dealing with their conflicted feelings about power and the land: "Every one of us has places to go sight-seeing in their own history." What Kittredge's people encounter in their sight-seeing is a chasm between the clarity of the natural world and the muck and mess of human relations. This universal dilemma is at the core of western literature, and Kittredge serves it straight up, free of the cliches of rugged individualism. His characters hurt one another with a kind of sad inevitability that makes their silence even more deafening. Bill Ott
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

“Kittredge’s stories—graceful, savvy, expansive, poignant, and sometimes even grave—tell us that it is our affections, not our courage or our toughness or our willingness to be unequivocal, that keeps us from one day to another. And that is a truth worth hearing. I only wish there were more of these stories.” —Richard Ford

Product Details

  • Paperback: 200 pages
  • Publisher: Graywolf Press; First Edition edition (July 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1555973841
  • ISBN-13: 978-1555973841
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.3 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,096,636 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stories from the Great Basin. . ., April 8, 2004
This review is from: The Best Short Stories of William Kittredge (Paperback)
This is a fine collection of stories set in the West by a man who grew up on a big family ranch in southern Oregon and eventually settled as a writer in western Montana. Kittredge is a promoter of other Western writers' talent, editing anthologies like "The Portable Western Reader" for Penguin and helping to bring to the screen a film version of Norman Maclean's "A River Runs Through It." In this collection of short stories, Kittredge reveals his own particular talents as a Western writer, drawing on his knowledge of rural and small town living in the Great Basin and Montana. His characters are genuine and deeply etched by the western code of individualism, self-sufficiency, and personal freedom. They are also haunted by the dark side of that code - isolation, loneliness, and restlessness.

The men in these stories are strong and independent, both physically and emotionally. But they are not infallible. The women in their lives typically reveal to them things about themselves they'd rather not know. A man who hires a crop-duster to spray his land discovers that the pilot's command of an airplane excites wanderlust in the wife he thought he knew. A 34-year-old man, taking a wife and fathering a child, discovers that she was once the lover of his married brother. A man goes in hunt of a grizzly after the killing of a young woman camper, and in a chilling temptation of fate, puts his life in the hands of another woman to whom he has given his high-powered rifle.

In other stories, a boy's idyllic life collapses into grief when his loving father dies while they are hunting geese in a frozen landscape. A combine operator harvests a field of wheat for a rancher and dies, his intestines perforated by a lifetime of hard work and hard knocks. A penniless cowboy works the ranch of a rich woman he has loved since she was a girl, knowing that "There is nothing to own but what you do." An old man's daughter is shot and killed, and the young man who first romanced her pays a call on her mourning father.

The stories often deal with death or are about the defiance of death, and these themes seem to emerge from the landscape itself - remote, sparsely populated, given to extremes of heat and cold. The characters Kittredge creates are sharply drawn, and their speech is colorful and unschooled. Emotion surges beneath taciturn surfaces. There is tension in their unspoken desires, and for that reason the relationships between men and women are rarely untroubled. I highly recommend this collection of stories for readers interested in the West and the psychological impact of wide-open spaces and unsentimental lives. As a companion book, I'd also recommend Ralph Beer's terrific Montana novel, "The Blind Corral."

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than God, April 26, 2005
By 
Ralph Beer "Jackson Creek" (Grand Junction, Colorado United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Best Short Stories of William Kittredge (Paperback)
Kittredge is best known, perhaps, for his essays on the American West, but some of us old timers have been reading (and loving) his short stories for thirty years now. Bill's prose reinforces the rumors that God sat in on his graduate fiction workshops at the University of Montana back in 1978; his characters take your breath away on their varius paths to self-discovery and self-destruction; and, always, there is the cruel force of the West itself, underlying each and every sentence.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Be prepared for a downer, April 28, 2009
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This review is from: The Best Short Stories of William Kittredge (Paperback)
Well written in a brutal way, but there is only so much I can take of stories about depressed, alcoholic macho men who are hurting everyone around them. If you live like this, you might get more out of these characters than I did, but then you would probably not be reading a book in your spare time. You'd be drinking and driving and arguing with your spouse instead.
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